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Posts Tagged ‘ iPhone App ’

Facebook Adds Timeline to iPhone App

By on December 21, 2011


By David Daw
December 21, 2011

SAN FRANCISCO – Facebook now lets iPhone owners view its new Timeline layout and has added several extra handy features in an app update pushed out to iPhone users on Sunday. iPad users still can’t view Facebook Timeline layouts.

Facebook launched its updated Android apps last week when Timeline was released. Facebook has already updated its Android mobile app with the layout. It’s unclear why the iOS update was delayed until the weekend but possibilities include waiting for approval from Apple’s app store and bug fixes. The Timeline layout was shown earlier this year at the company’s f8 Conference.

Timeline however isn’t the only new feature added in 4.1. The new version of Facebook’s app brings a lot of the new features that the social networking giant added over the last year to its mobile apps.

You now have the ability to add and sort into Facebook’s lists feature to help them organize their friends. It also adds the subscribe to page feature that the company added along with it’s revamp of news feed. And, as originally reported byTechcrunch, the new app felt considerably faster than previous versions during my time with the app.

This new iOS update leaves only the company’s iPad app without the new Timeline layout. Facebook promised that an update for Apple’s popular tablet is on the way.

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By JR Raphael
April 12, 2010

iphone-appsSAN FRANCISCO  – Amidst all the hullabaloo surrounding the launch of Apple’s iPhone OS 4.0, the contentious company from Cupertino is coming under fire for a quietly made change to its iPhone developer’s agreement.
The change, first noted by John Gruber of the Daring Fireball blog, effectively prohibits developers from using any “intermediary translation” tools in building native iPhone applications. In simpler terms, programmers will be required to use only Apple’s proprietary tools in creating their apps; they won’t be able to translate their programs from other platforms as they’d previously been able to do.

In simpler terms yet, Apple’s saying, “Do it our way, or don’t do it at all,” in an even more extreme fashion than it’s ever said it before.

Apple’s iPhone License and Adobe Flash

Apple’s iPhone license change would cause numerous apps known to iPhone and iPad users to be outlawed. Among the highest profile victims are programs created with Adobe’s Flash-to-iPhone compiler; some of the iPad-friendly magazine implementations we’ve been hearing about for months revolve around that technology.

So why is Apple revising its rules in such a restrictive way? There’s no shortage of theories. Some say it’s a bold new attack in Apple’s ongoing battle against Adobe; others insist it’s all part of Apple’s mission to create the best possible user experience. Others yet believe it’s part of Apple’s effort to build a regime even more oppressive than China’s.

(OK, that last one was a satirical suggestion. But let’s be honest: It’s not that far of a stretch.)

Apple iPhone Developer Backlash

Regardless of the reason, current iPhone developers are wasting no time in voicing their thoughts on Apple’s shift. Joe Hewitt, who programmed the iPhone’s Facebook application, lashed out against the updated developer’s agreement on his Twitter stream.
“So much for programming language innovation on the iPhone platform,” Hewitt wrote. “It’s so hard to reconcile my love for these beautiful devices on my desk with my hatred for the ugly words in that legal agreement.”

Developer Hank Williams, meanwhile, questions whether Apple’s change will lead to a legal challenge.

“This concept of what language something is written in is an insidious concept and strikes at the core of product development and of computer science in general,” Williams stated on his blog. “Trying to control where something is originally done is attempting to control the thought process that yields a given result.”

Apple’s Closed Culture: Some Perspective

As for me, I’ve expressed my thoughts on Apple’s closed and restrictive culture plenty of times before. And I know the response from Apple’s most loyal defenders tends to be that Apple does these things so it can maintain a smooth and seamless user experience.
Rather than rehashing what’s already been said, then, let me pose this question: What if it had been Microsoft making this same move? Declaring that developers could write programs for Windows using only its proprietary toolkit? Prohibiting all noncompliant creations (including, yes, Apple’s own iTunes) from running on its systems?

Taken out of the context of Cupertino, it’s easy to see why Apple’s actions are out of the realm of reason — and, quite simply, out of line.

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By David Coursey
November 24, 2009

Art by Luis Anthony G. Oliveros

Now, I am as much against smoking as anyone. I also do not want workers needlessly exposed to hazardous substances. Still, for Apple to deny warranty claims on Macs exposed to cigarette smoke seems way over the line.

Yet, that is what The Consumerist says Apple has done on at least two occasions in recent months.

Apple is apparently telling at least some customers that the amount of cigarette smoke residue inside their computers makes it unsafe for the company to perform warranty service on them, despite the lack of such a clause in the company’s warranty agreement.

The Consumerist says the complaint as been raised as far as Steve Jobs’ office, with no relief for the customers involved.

The story was reported on Friday, though the Consumerist said it had sought, but failed to receive, any explanation from Apple HQ over a period of months. (The site is part of the Consumers Union/Consumer Reports organization, so I deem the report credible).

Now, if this were Dell, I would send Michael an e-mail and expect to hear back. At HP, I would send e-mail to my PR contacts, likewise at most other hardware companies. I would ask first, expect the company to say a mistake had been made, and get on with my life. You would not need to read about it. Mistakes happen.

Two things about the story amaze me.

First, that Apple–presuming they are not merely trying to avoid warranty claims, which seems far-fetched–would not send the customers a refurbished Mac as a replacement for the smokehouse Macs.

Heck, they could return the smoked-up machine along with a refurb and instructions on how to put the old hard drive into the “new” machine.

Second, my hazardous materials training has taught me that however dangerous smoke residue may be, there is a way to deal with it.

With its billions, Apple could buy a containment chamber where work could be done in a completely different atmosphere from where the technician stood.

Imagine one of those chambers that lab workers use, inserting their hands through holes in the box into permanently attached gloves. Only the gloves and a set of tools from inside the box touch the computer.

If something along this line is good enough for smallpox and Ebola, it will probably protect someone from a smoky Mac.

Alternately, a self-contained breathing apparatus, such as firefighters wear, would prevent inhalation of the cigarette residue.

I suspect many wearable air filters or respirators would do the same thing. That, plus gloves and protective gown, would seem to assure safety. (Ask an expert to be sure).

Apple could also open up the smoky computers and set them outside for a while to air out.

Further, if Apple sent someone who already smokes to do the work, it is hard to say how much worse they would be for the slight additional exposure. I’ll bet a smoker would even volunteer for the assignment, if only as a means of helping fellow smokers get their computers fixed.

My hope is Apple will read the stories that have begun to appear and stop this nonsense immediately. I suspect the stories about these incidents will encourage some money-hungry lawyer to find the aggrieved customers and get to the bottom of this.

I would like to say I expect to write a follow-up in which Apple has a very good explanation that makes its actions seem reasonable. I would be happy to write a story in which Apple challenges the facts, or apologizes and promises to do better.

What I expect, however, is for Apple, the company that approved the “Baby Shaker” iPhone app, to remain silent and try to wait the whole thing out.

Maybe Apple will try to dodge this issue the way they tried to dodge overheating iPhones and Snow Leopard data loss?

By adding my voice to the chorus asking Apple to explain, I hope the wait will be a little shorter.

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HDR Camera for iPhone

By on October 27, 2009

October 28, 2009

HDR Camera for the iPhone
By Beau Colburn
Macworld

HDR Camera
$1.99
www.macphun.com

HDR photography is tricky business. Under the right circumstances, high dynamic range imaging can add a valuable level of detail to a photo and bring it to life. It can just as easily be taken too far and ruin a photo, causing it to look overdone and cartoonish. (And of course, there is plenty of room for personal opinion and taste in this area as well). HDR Camera by MacPhun, allows a selection of filters to applied to your iPhone photos to achieve an HDR look.

Traditionally, to get the best results from an HDR image, three of more of the same images taken with staggered exposure settings are combined to create one image. Think of a beach at sunset. An exposure that properly captures the sky may lose detail on the sand because it’s too dark, and an image that is exposed to capture the sand may loose detail on the colors of the sunset because the sky will be overexposed and blown out. Ideally, an HDR image can balance these extremes out, and give an image that represents the whole scene. Unfortunately, in my experience, you’re often left with an image that looks very unnatural.

This is what I found when using HDR Camera as well. To begin with, the app is only using a single image (while this single-image method can be done with desktop HDR editing as well, it’s not the preferred choice). After you select the image, you can choose one of eight filters to be applied. Depending on the combination of image and filter you chose, the end result may be subtle, or it may be way too much.

More often than not, I found the results from HDR Camera to be far too extreme. There are no adjustment settings available–only a choice of filters. While you may be able to play around with various filters on each photo until you find one you’re happy with, I didn’t find the process worth it.

If you’re a fan of HDR photography and are willing to spend some time tinkering, you may end up with a satisfactory result. For everyone else, there are plenty of options to improve your iPhone photos without going down the HDR path.

HDR Camera screenshots
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