Twitter apps for iPad, iPhone and Android undergo major overhaul

Social networks are increasingly positioning themselves to cater to the mobile audience in a better way. In a bid to do so, Twitter has now revamped its app for iPad with better design and looks as well as newer features.

The new Twitter for iPad app comes with the option to add a ‘cover photo’, much like Facebook, to your account. The cover photo will be visible to your followers when they visit your profile page through their tablet or smartphone. It won’t influence the web interface just yet. (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Meet The Tweet lets you follow Twitter feeds without an account, Twitter fully integrated into iOS 5,

Teen Pranksters’ Facebook Trick Kid’s Mom into Believing He Was Dead

Online hoaxes are a dime a dozen these days. A pretty cruel one recently made the news. It was in the form of a Facebook hoax that alarmed a mother and made her relatives think that her seven-year-old son had passed away.

rip liddo honest
However, the reality was that Javier Quintana was alive and kicking and standing right in front of her. Unfortunately, friends and family members didn’t know that and were devastated at the ‘news.’

Pictures, videos, and stories about Javier were posted online on a Facebook memorial page that was dedicated to Javier. His mother Patricia was beyond angry and has since filed a report with the local police.

Authorities looked into the matter and discovered that two teenagers were behind the whole thing. A 14-year-old girl was joking to a 13-year old boy about Javier’s death (which doesn’t sound like much of a joke), when the boy took things too far and created the memorial page. The girl asked him to take it down but by then, messages of grief were already pouring on the page.

No charges have been filed, and Javier, who was confused about the whole fiasco, was quick to assure friends and family: “I am alive and I’m fine… I don’t know why they put it, but I just feel bad for that.”

So guys, just avoid the whole mess and don’t make jokes about death because they really aren’t funny at all.

[Daily Mail via Softpedia]


Keep Your Life on a String While Sitting on the Can [Design]

Ah, yes, the water closet: forever refuge from the inconveniences of life. Here’s a new way to hang—and hang out with—the many accoutrements you use in your domestic temple of self worship. More »

Contour+2 on sale now: iPhone app update adds Bluetooth remote control

The Contour+2 rugged sports action camera has gone up for sale, a $399.99 accessory for immortalizing your extreme sports moments. Snatching Full HD 1080p video through a wide-angle lens, the Contour+2 works with the freshly-updated Contour Connect App for iOS, which now operates as a remote control over a Bluetooth connection with the camera.

Normally, triggering recording on the Contour+2 is a simple matter of pulling back the large switch on the top of the barrel. However, if you want finer control, including the ability to adjust HD video resolution, lighting, and audio sensitivity, in addition to stopping and starting recording, the app makes all that easy.

The eventual footage can be recorded at up to 120fps, although you only get those framerates in 480p mode. There’s an external microphone input, and everything is recorded to a bundled 4GB microSD card (which you can optionally swap out for something larger) with playback via mini-HDMI connection.

Contour has also boosted its Contour Storyteller app, for when you’ve offloaded your videos. They can now show improved GPS data, including speed, elevation, and distance travelled during video playback.

The Contour+2 is available now, including from Apple stores in the US. You can download the free Contour Connect app from the App Store [iTunes link]. At present, the Android version of the app doesn’t support the Contour+2.


Contour+2 on sale now: iPhone app update adds Bluetooth remote control is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


ioSafe takes to Indiegogo to raise funds for the N2, its new disaster-proof NAS

DNP EMBARGO September 18th 1200pm ET  ioSafe takes to Kickstarter to raise funds for its new disasterproof NAS

ioSafe makes hard-drives so sturdy that it can reduce fire, electricity and Terrence O’Brien to tears at the mere thought of them. Now, it’s producing a new disaster-proof NAS, but as a small business, needs a cash injection from consumers to make it happen. As such, it’s taking to Indiegogo to raise funds for the ioSafe N2, a private cloud Synology-powered NAS that’ll keep up to 8TB of data protected from the elements. On the outside, a steel body that’ll take a building collapsing onto it protects a chemically bound fireproof insulation and water / heat barrier will stop your discs flooding or melting, depending on the catastrophe. The company’s planning to have the units shipping by January next year, when the 23lb box will set you back $600 without discs — and if you’re hard enough, you can find PR after the break.

Continue reading ioSafe takes to Indiegogo to raise funds for the N2, its new disaster-proof NAS

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Amped Wireless adds a dual-band access point to its range of super-strength networking gear

Amped Wireless adds a dualband access point to its range of superstrength networking gear

Amped Wireless has a single-minded purpose of eliminating blackspots in your WiFi coverage with a range of routers, adapters and repeaters to pump out 600mW of internet where you need it most. Now that it’s done adding dual-band technology to its lineup of products, it’s busting out a similarly-equipped access point that promises to add a further 7,500 square feet of coverage to your home. Capable of automatically setting itself up on your home (or office) network, it’s packing the same USB port for storage that its recently revamped brothers have seen. It’ll be available at the end of September for $170, and you can find a high-powered collection of words and punctuation arranged in the form of a press release included after the break.

Continue reading Amped Wireless adds a dual-band access point to its range of super-strength networking gear

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Amped Wireless adds a dual-band access point to its range of super-strength networking gear originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 18 Sep 2012 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The iPhone 5′s Greatest Inside Story: Chipmaking Maturation For Apple

Apple-A6

The iPhone 5 brings a lot to the table, but a lot of its changes lie under the hood away from prying eyes. Or, at least, away from those eyes until Friday when it’ll get opened up by a host of folks, including iFixit.com’s perennial new Apple hardware tear-down. The iPhone 5 has already given up maybe its greatest secret, however: A custom-designed A6 system-on-a-chip that represents the fulfillment of an acquisition made almost half a decade ago.

The A6, unlike its predecessors the A5 and A4, isn’t simply a rebranded ARM design with minor tweaks. Instead, as Anand Shimpi of AnandTech discovered, it’s Apple’s own creation, based on an ARM blueprint — which it also licensed in addition to specific generic processors — but bearing much more of Apple’s own direct input. In other words, Apple is finally emerging as a chipmaker in its own right, and this could have a huge impact on device performance and consumer-facing features in its smartphones and tablets going forward.

I discussed the changes in a call with iFixit co-founder and IEEE Consumer Electronics Society member Kyle Wiens, who was excited about the new direction and its potential implications for users and Apple hardware.

“We’ve been wondering for a long time whatever came of Apple’s acquisition of P.A. Semi, so this is many, many years of strategy and development for Apple finally bearing fruit,” he explained. “And the critical thing here I think is probably power savings. Apple really knows, and has known for a long time, that cutting power [demands] was the most important thing. And I think Apple has been even more focused on that than even ARM has been.”

Battery has long been one of the iPhone’s major advantages over competition from Android handset makers, but the new iPhone 5 had a lot of new sources of power draw to contend with, as well as a slimmer profile within which to put the battery. There’s a new, larger screen, as well as LTE connectivity and software features like Passbook that use always-on location monitoring to serve up geo-fenced feature offerings. That combination of requirements is likely what drove Apple to move into its own design, allowing it to push the envelope on processor power consumption. And now that it’s moved into custom chip design, Wiens definitely sees that approach spreading to other areas of its mobile business.

“I think this is a long-term strategy, and that they’ve been at this for a long time,” he said. “I think they realized when they released the iPhone that this was a new form factor and that they were going to have to have a long-term processor strategy for it, and that ARM was a nice framework, but that this was going to take them in direction that was different from what processors had historically been designed for.” In other words, Apple has long known that a new kind of computing required an entirely new kind of chip, and only now is it really beginning to fulfill that vision.

Wiens points out that if you look at the iPhone 5′s highlights, there’s only really one place power savings could come from, and that’s the processor. Apple’s approach then not only provides the immediate benefit of making a more powerful device smaller and lighter without sacrificing battery performance, but also gives it a considerable future proprietary advantage to hold over the competition, especially if it keeps improving on its initial chip design, which seems likely, given it has the talent not only of P.A. Semi, but also of Intrinsity, an ARM processor design company it picked up in 2010.

Apple has always been about creating the perfect union between hardware and software in order to deliver the best possible user experience. Its emergence as a mobile chip designer in its own right only means that integration will become even more seamless in future devices, pushing the boundaries not only of what those gadgets can do, but also of the energy cost of doing them.


The Most Incredible Volcano Video of All Time [Video]

“The most incredible volcano video of ALL time.” That’s how Geoff Mackley—the man in this film—has titled his latest production. After watching it, it doesn’t seem like an exaggeration at all. It’s truly insane. This guy and his two friends are cray. More »

The Quest to Build a 128-Story, 5-Block Mega-Skyscraper in the Middle of Manhattan [Architecture]

If constructed in Manhattan’s Chinatown neighborhood, the Zhongshan Center would stand 2173 feet tall, provide 15,000,000 square feet, house 130 elevators, 3,000 cars, a revolving restaurant, a shopping mall, and a “super-galactic hotel.” But considering the proposal for this mammoth building—one that would occupy five square blocks—comes from a retired New York resident, it’ll probably never happen. More »

Sprint May Take Away Your Only Shot at a Free, Unlimited Data iPhone (Updated) [IPhone]

As happens every time we get a new iPhone the prices of the older models were slashed. Apple announced that the 8GB iPhone 4 would be free with a two-year contract. Except Sprint doesn’t have the deal. Now a supposedly leaked document reported by 9to5Mac reveals that you might not be able to get a iPhone 4 on Sprint after Friday. No free iPhone with unlimited data for you! More »