The iPhone 4, along with Apple’s App Store, have been given world record awards from Guinness as, respectively, the fastest-selling portable gaming system and the most popular application marketplace.
Originally posted at Apple Talk
The iPhone 4, along with Apple’s App Store, have been given world record awards from Guinness as, respectively, the fastest-selling portable gaming system and the most popular application marketplace.
Originally posted at Apple Talk
We’ve already had some success getting Netflix for Android up and running on an officially unsupported phone (a Droid X), but those not able to get it to work simply by transferring and installing the .APK now have another option. As some folks on XDA and Reddit have discovered, you can apparently just edit a few system settings to make your phone (or Nook Color, for that matter) think it’s actually an HTC G2, which is apparently all it takes to satisfy the Netflix app. It doesn’t work with every phone, of course, but quite a few seem to have had success with it. Unfortunately for some, you’ll also need to first root your phone in order to make those changes, but the steps are fairly simple once you’ve done that. Hit up the links below for all the details, and let us know how it worked out for you in the comments below. Just remember: when in doubt, back up.
Workaround brings Netflix to more (rooted) Android users originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 13 May 2011 15:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink Techland |
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Apple's App Store is home to 400,000 apps from third-party programmers. Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com
If your pockets aren’t deep enough to fight a corporate giant, then sue the little guys for milk money.
That’s the idea behind a patent company’s legal threats against several independent iPhone app programmers rather than Apple.
Several iOS programmers on Friday morning said they received a legal complaint from Lodsys, a patent-holding firm.
Lodsys is accusing the developers of infringing a patent related to the usage of an “upgrade” button that customers can use to upgrade from a free version of an app to a paid version, or to make purchases from within an app.
Apple provides the payment technology that programmers embed inside their apps, but the Lodsys complaint is instead aimed squarely at the programmers using Apple’s in-app purchasing system.
Programmers who say they have received the complaint include James Thomson, creator of the scientific calculator app PCalc; Dave Castelnuovo, creator of the best-selling game Pocket God; and Matt Braun, developer of the popular iPhone kids game MASH.
Many apps use Apple’s in-app payment system, so the number of companies to receive the legal threat could soon grow much larger.
“Just got hit by very worrying threat of patent infringement lawsuit for using in-app purchase in PCalc Lite. Legal docs arrived via fedex,” Thomson tweeted Friday morning.
Programmers who have received the complaint say that Lodsys is demanding that they negotiate for a license to use the “upgrade” technology within 21 days, or a lawsuit will be filed.
This incident is an example of a practice that many in the industry would call “patent trolling,” which means using patents for little purpose other than to sue other companies until they cough up damages or licensing fees.
Lodsys did not respond to a request for comment.
On its website, Lodsys claims ownership of patents related to technologies that “provide for online purchasing of consumable supplies” and “sell upgrades or complimentary products,” among others.
Lodsys is based in eastern Texas, which is home to a federal court that often sides with patent holders. Patent lawyers around the world know that the easiest and quickest way to win a patent-related dispute is to file the complaint in Marshall, Texas. As a result, many defendants choose to settle instead of fight.
“One concern is that if we are the lightning rod, it could end up being pretty expensive for us, because they would choose to sue us no matter what our argument is,” Pocket God creator Castelnuovo told Wired.com.
Apple did not respond to a request for comment. It’s unclear whether the company will get involved in the patent dispute.
However, it seems likely that Apple will intervene. If Lodsys sues or imposes licensing fees on iOS programmers, it would deter developers from building apps for the iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch, and would hurt the ecosystem as a whole. Also, Apple takes 30 percent of each in-app sale, so it would lose money if Lodsys were to succeed.
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Update: We’ve revised this post to clarify that this isn’t exactly a new issue. The same problem existed in previous revisions, but the big issue now is that the separate thermal cable has been integrated into the SATA cable. It’s similar to what was done before, just a little harder to get around now. But, you can get around it.
Update 2: Hardmac has a detailed analysis of the situation which we’d recommend you check out. It verifies OWC’s findings, and recommends you short pins 2 and 7 to basically circumvent the issue. Why does Apple do this? The separate temperature monitor enables OS X to more regularly check the temperature of the system’s drives without compromising overall bandwidth provided by SATA.
iMac frees you from the tyranny (and convenience) of servicing your own hard drives (update: not exactly a new problem) originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 13 May 2011 15:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Fast-growing site that lets you connect to Webcams around the world adds a new location feature. CNET logs on and gets uncomfortable fast.
Originally posted at Webware
Nouvoyance, a Samsung subsidiary, is set to show off a supersharp 10.1-inch LCD for tablets that is essentially a supersize retina display.
You know what’s cool? Handing out 5,000 Android tablets to your most loyal developers at Google I/O. You know what’s not cool? Handing out 5,000 Android tablets that can’t have files loaded onto them. Believe or not, that’s exactly what happened at this week’s I/O conference, where hordes of developers were handed a Galaxy Tab 10.1 Limited Edition that cannot currently interface with OS X, and has a whale of a time doing so with Windows 7. During our initial preview of Music Beta, we noticed that our MacBook Pro (OS X 10.6) wouldn’t actually recognize the tablet, even after installing Android File Transfer. Given that we didn’t actually need that functionality for the purpose of said article, we threw it on the backburner.
For those unaware, Android File Transfer is a small app that’s required to transfer content between OS X and Android 3.0. Avid users of Froyo and Gingerbread may be appalled that any Honeycomb device they buy will require a piece of software to interface with it, but hey — there it is. At any rate, it seems to us that the latest build of Android File Transfer doesn’t include the device ID for Samsung’s heretofore unreleased Tab 10.1; if you’ll recall, the standard edition of this thing isn’t slated to hit consumer hands until June 8th. Regardless of what tricks we tried (installing a Mac version of Kies Mini, for example), we couldn’t get a single Apple in our stable to recognize the thing. In one instance, a Mac viewed the device as a “Samsung Modem” within the Networking pane — that’s as close as we could come to getting the two to mingle. AllThingsD‘s Ina Fried said her Tab 10.1 LE was merely recognized as a camera-like device within Aperture.
Over on the Windows side, things are only marginally less awful. We’ve had a couple of Wintel boxes outright refuse to play nice with this “mysterious USB device,” while others required multiple reboots and driver searchers to finally mount it as an external storage device — and only with USB Debugging disabled. The upside is that those with patience (and a Windows 7 rig) can look forward to a single method of transfer, but it’s certainly less than ideal.
We’re surmising that Google’s cooking up a new version of Android File Transfer as we speak that’ll take care of the compatibility issues, hopefully long before consumers start seeing these in early June. But for developers in the here and now? Stop wasting your afternoon trying to figure out why your Mac just won’t cooperate, and give that Win7 system a little love.
Update: After a bit of additional digging, we noticed that it’s possible to access the Tab’s file system from a Mac or Windows PC by using the Android SDK, putting the tablet in USB debugging mode, and running ddms. It’s not the most convenient solution if you want to quickly and conveniently transfer some content to / from the device, but it should work until AFT sees an update. Alternatively, we’re hearing that XNJB — an older open source project originally built for Creative Nomads — enables files to be transferred whenever it’s in a good mood.
Galaxy Tab 10.1 Limited Edition not seen in Android File Transfer, Windows usability is spotty originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 13 May 2011 15:10:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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We’ve seen them spit out fancy glass vases and tiny white strandbeests, and now the 3D thingy makers are pumping out cutesy salt and pepper shakers. Those hyper-glossy white rabbits pictured above are some of the first spawns of Glazed Ceramics, the newly minted food-safe material available from Shapeways. Glazed Ceramics are fired in an oven or kiln like traditional ceramics and are then coated with a lead-free non-toxic gloss — the result is food-safe, recyclable, and heat resistant up to 1000 degrees Celsius. The new material is now available to Shapeways designers and will be until August 12th, at which point the company will decide whether its worth keeping around. For now you can sate your appetite for 3D printed shiny white dishes by clicking the source link below.
Shapeways Glazed Ceramics make 3D printed objects you can eat off of originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 13 May 2011 14:43:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Permalink New York Times |
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Researchers from Stanford University create an autonomous checkout clerk capable of scanning and bagging your items in real time.
Hey there fellow iOS users, just thought we’d let you know that the Engadget app for iPhone and iPod touch has now been updated to version 2.2. What’s new, you ask? Well, on top of a stash of performance tweaks, there’s now a handy landscape viewing mode along with much improved sharing features; or if you prefer saving the goodies for yourself, then you’ll also like our new “save for later” options for Evernote, Instapaper, and Read It Later. Head over to the App Store to nab the fresh update now.
Oh, don’t worry, we haven’t forgotten our buddies on the Windows Phone boat. We can assure you that our devs are hard at work at cooking up an Engadget app for Windows Phone 7 just as we speak, so stay tuned for an announcement soon.
Engadget app for iPhone and iPod touch updated to 2.2.0, get it now! originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 13 May 2011 14:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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