This week in the App Store, we've got some great freebie apps. That's a good thing. Especially when you're a beleaguered Gulfstream GIV pilot getting hit hard by the soaring price of jet fuel. This week was also great for pilots in several other ways, but there's some stuff for the rest of us, too. Come along as we see what's been hitting millions of Springboards over the past seven days. Rooms: Until this week, IRC fans had to jailbreak to get chatting, but Rooms developed this week brings the same Colloquy-based engine to... lire la suite
Comme chaque semaine, voici votre rendez-vous vidéo: la Clubic Week. Pour rappel, vous retrouvez ici, chaque semaine, un résumé « visuel et animé » des actualités multimédia qui ont marqué la semaine passée.
Bloggasm, LA Times Blog Editor, National Enquirer and John Edwards
Comme chaque semaine, voici votre rendez-vous vidéo: la Clubic Week. Pour rappel, vous retrouvez ici, chaque semaine, un résumé « visuel et animé » des actualités multimédia qui ont marqué la semaine.
Clubic Week: l'iPhone 2 à partir de 149 Euros
Bonjour, Voilà, j'ai un ordi portable sous vista, récent, un Dell pour être précis. Je navigue en Wifi, sans aucun soucis, les images sont lentes à charger, mais la navigation reste très supportable. Par contre, j'ai installé une carte PCI Sweex 300mégas dans mon ordi fixe, qui tourne sur XP.
Jun 16 2008Britney Spears. A bikini. VEGAS! This time terror doubles down More:
There are literally thousands of apps in the iPhone App Store, with hundreds being added each week. It's hard to keep track. In the same vein as our "iPhone Apps We Like" posts, take a look here at what stood out this week—notable for usefulness, novelty, birthing a child, whatever.
Always a microcosm of the greater world, the App Store this week focused on two things us Americans have been thinking about a lot recently—the upcoming election, and tossing back a few this Labor Day weekend. And with this week's apps, there's no reason for your iPhone to be left out. The political applications, sadly, tend to swing pretty far to the side of app absurdity:
At the Let's Rock event this week, Apple pushed the new iPod touch hard (and iPhone too, obviously) as a viable gaming platform. Steve even went so far as to call it the best portable gaming platform out there. Strong words for DS and PSP fans, but the crop of games popping up in the App Store continues to build steam.
Do you think a store full of geek developers could let September 19th go by without a surge of pirate-related applications? Personally, I'm waiting for the app that pushes live updates of real pirate advisories so my raw shipments of bulgur wheat stop getting jacked off the Somali coast. But in the app store, it's all about fun, so let's do some silly voices.
This week marked the start of more interesting times for mobile apps. You may have heard, even, that Android is here—on T-Mobile's G1. Perhaps it wasn't a coincidence that it was a relatively quiet week in the App Store, as devs watch a new challenger take the stage (and power on their iPhone lightsabers).
I just got off the phone with Chris Hughes and Scott Goodstein of the Barak Obama campaign. They’ve announced an Obama iPhone application, and I was curious why bother with just a month to go before the election. It’s actually one of the slicker iPhone apps I’ve seen for any purpose.
Arik Hesseldahl of Business Week claims that a source tells him the official iPhone SDK will be delayed by one to three weeks, much like the recent delay in the Apple TV 2. upgrade (2 weeks). Apple.
The first iPhone 3G reviews have just hit, from Walt Mossberg of the WSJ and All Things D, Ed Baig from USA Today and David Pogue from the NYTimes. No one goes deep into the app store but here's what they think: Walt Mossberg of the WSJ has been testing it "for a couple of weeks" and sees that surfing on the faster 3G is between three and five times the speed of the original iPhone.
So here I'm in Neeeew Yooork. Teeeeerrific! That's my Andy Warhol impersonation). One of the first things I did this week was to get a US cellphone contract, and since I was there, what the heck, I replaced my broken-screen iPhone with a brand new iPhone 3G—which required a $500 deposit because I have no credit history in this country.
Besides supporting the latest iPhone OS version, beta 5 doesn't do a whole lot else besides throwing in small tweaks to the UI, tweaks to the developers tools and some bug fixes. No big feature addition like last time, but you gotta update if you're making iPhone apps. You just gotta!
Just now at WWDC, Steve Jobs confirmed the long-rumored iPhone 3G, which is what he actually called it. It hits stores in the US and over 70 other countries on July 11th. Here it will costs $199 for the 8GB version, and $299 for the 16GB one (in black and white). galleryPost('iphone3gwwdc3d', 3, '');
iPhone 2. cracké : cool ! Bof. Ce matin dans Google Reader je suis tombé sur le tuto blogiphone qui explique comment performer le jailbreak de son iPhone 2. Comme c'était plutôt bien renseigné et que je n'avais rien d'autre a faire, j'ai décidé de remettre a zéro mon V1.
telenav does GPS navigation for iPhone 3G Published on July 12th, 2008 in gps navigation We thought TomTom would be the first to come out with a GPS navigation application for iPhone 3G but as it turns out it is going to be Telenav. Or at least that’s what gizmodo says since there’s no mention of it on telenav’s website yet.
Bonjour à tous ! J'ai un souci avec ma connexion entre mon Iphone et ma livebox, je m'explique : Après avoir : éteint l'iPhone 2) débrancher et rallumer ma livebox 3) appuyer sur le bouton d'association de la lifebox :