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Mobile News -
General
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Written by Administrator
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Friday, 09 December 2011 18:57 |
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A new video has been uploaded by one eminent member of the jail-breaking community and it gives us the first look at untethered jailbreak for iOS 5. Details (and video), after the jump!
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Mobile News -
Mobile Rumors
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Written by TK Dinesh
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Tuesday, 25 August 2009 15:54 |
Go ahead, I dare you to explain to me the utility you derive from playing 1080p video on your iPhone 3GS. A post on a Chinese forum suggests that the phone is perfectly capable of playing 720p and 1080p when encoded with H.264; Apple currently limits playback resolution to 640×480. The angle right now is, “How dare Apple artificially limit the resolution that we can play?” Well, one, it’s Apple, what do you expect and, two, can image how quickly the battery will deplete when playing 1080p video?
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Mobile News -
Mobile Rumors
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Written by TK Dinesh
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Tuesday, 25 August 2009 15:44 |
Provided Apple and/or AT&T don’t throw a fit, you’ll soon be able to use Rhapsody on your iPhone (and iPod touch). The App works over 3G and EDGE (and Wi-Fi, of course), streaming music from a library of more than 8 million songs.
The App is being submitted this week for Apple to review; hopefully it’s not rejected for some lame reason. It seems to work easily enough: launch the App, search for your song, and away you go. You can, of course, also browse by artist, album, etc. Pretty simple and about what you’d expect, not that there’s anything wrong with that.
If you’re not familiar with Rhapsody music-on-demand service, just think Spotify—execpt that it works here in the U.S. with having to find a UK proxy server or using a beta. (I, for the record, have access to the Spotify beta. Perks of the job, I suppose.) Rather than download an MP3 or AAC (or whatever other kooky format you can think of), you merely stream the song on-demand. The video shows U2’s “Beautiful Day” playing as soon you hit play.
The benefit to streaming is that you have instant (if your Internet connection plays nicely) access to a boatload of songs, versus how ever many you have on your iPod. Of course, Rhapsody (or Spotify or NameYourStreamingService) could go bankrupt or otherwise blow up, suddenly leaving you without access to Lady Gaga. That’s not a world I want to live in.
But yeah, Real has submitted the App. If/when it comes out, I’m sure we’ll have a look-see. Oh, and Real is working on an Android App, but it’s not done yet. Sorry.
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Mobile News -
General
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Written by Administrator
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Friday, 13 November 2009 19:53 |
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Remember the iPhone app named 0870?
The iPhone app made news earlier this year when Apple finally approved it after a record 429 days. Though this was an aberration, most iPhone app developers find themselves in similar situations when their iPhone apps take weeks or sometimes months to get approved.
In an attempt to redress the situation, Apple has now introduced a new feature in the Dev Center website that will give the iPhone app developers a better idea about status of their application's approval.
iPhone App developers will now be shown messages such as 'Waiting for Review', 'In Review' or 'Ready for Sale' against each of their submitted apps. While this is definitely a better scenario, we are not exactly sure if this will solve the issue. Apple provides new approval status feature for app developers
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Mobile News -
General
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Written by Administrator
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Friday, 13 November 2009 19:44 |
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The iPhone App Store has been ridiculed quite a bit in the past over their draconian as well as inconsistent approval policies.
These policies of Apple claimed another victim today when Joe Hewitt, the brain behind Facebook's iPhone app announced that he was quitting the project.
In a message sent over Twitter, Joe wrote:
"Time for me to try something new. I’ve handed the Facebook iPhone app off to another engineer, and I’m onto a new project".
When approached by the folks at TechCrunch, Joe revealed that the decision was entirely due to Apple's App Store policies. In his chat with TechCrunch, Joe said
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