iPhone Activation Servers Crumble Under The Weight Of iOS 7

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Happy iOS 7 day! Except for me. And legions of other iPhone owners who, for various reasons, had to activate their iPhone in the iOS 7 install process. Our phones are stuck in iOS 7 activation limbo.

Since early this morning, the activation servers are either down or very slow to respond, essentially rendering the phones useless and stuck in the install process. The situation is so bad, Apple reportedly issued an internal high-priority alert, notifying employees of the server issues that are preventing iPhone activation.

Apple better get its servers in line by Friday. There will be millions of new iPhones wanting to be activated.

In a perfect world, upgrading to iOS 7 would not require activation. However, if the install process fails, the best option is to restore to factory settings, which requires reactivating the phone. Or, perhaps, an owner decided it was a good time to do a fresh install, whipping the phone completely and starting fresh.

Or perhaps someone somewhere made a bad choice and bought a new iPhone today and needed to activate it.

Whatever the case, as noted by Apple’s internal memo and approximately a gazillion tweets, Apple’s iPhone activation servers are currently unresponsive for a lot of iPhone owners.

Engadget HD Podcast 367 – 09.18.13

Engadget HD Podcast 347 - 04.30.13

Yes, there was notable news in HD this week, but nothing gets Richard as fired up as Fantasy Football and GTA V. Thankfully, we were able pull him away from his Xbox for an hour of recording with Ben. The Engadget HD podcast is ready for a listen below.

Hosts: Ben Drawbaugh, Richard Lawler

Producer: Joe Pollicino

Hear the podcast

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Staples and Radio Shack have decided to remove Amazon Lockers from their stores because they’ve real

Staples and Radio Shack have decided to remove Amazon Lockers from their stores because they’ve realized that helping customers shop elsewhere isn’t a good idea. [Bloomberg]

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I Can’t Stop Laughing at These Dubbed Stock Videos

The Getty stock video used by producers to fill your screen with topical imagery is impossibly weird on its own. Seeing anything without sound is spooky and off-putting. But I’m laughing like I’m high as a kite at this compilation of stock videos that has been dubbed with sound. I can’t be the only one who thinks this is hilarious.

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Spray-on NeverWet street art appears after it rains

An example of a NeverWet-stenciled message only visible after water hits the surface.

(Credit: Screenshot by Christopher MacManus/CNET)

Some creative thinkers discovered that NeverWet — a superhydrophobic spray-on coating that makes liquid roll off any surface — works wonderfully as a way to create secret sidewalk art that can only be activated by water.

If you want to create some sneaky street art, then find a concrete sidewalk (or driveway), lay down a stencil, and spray it with NeverWet. After the NeverWet coating dries and rainfall comes, voila! The stenciled pattern stays dry and becomes highly visible on the soaked sidewalk. The element of surprise may vary on surfaces aside from concrete, as NeverWet dries with a somewhat frosted appearance.

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Scientists Have Found the Gene That Helps Us Forget

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Feedly embraces app development by opening up API to all

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Feedly just got markedly more developer-friendly. The news aggregator has added a slew of new third-party apps to its platform and has also opened up its new cloud API to all interested parties, starting…now. According to a post on the company’s blog, it enlisted 50 developers over the course of half a year to create an elastic programming interface that lets people create apps in less than a week. Interested developers can download the API at the source link below. You can also visit Feedly’s page to check out the selection of currently available apps.

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Via: Android Police

Source: Feedly, Building Feedly

Google Works On Integrating Their Services Together

This article was written on October 09, 2006 by CyberNet.

Late last week Google announced that they were not going to be launching any new services for a little while. Their primary focus will now be revamping their already released products. We have already seen evidence of this happening with the recent update to Google Reader.

This is definitely a good plan by Google because they need to work more on refining their products. The other thing that they said that they really want to do is integrate their services together so that users can easily take advantage of everything that they offer. I think that everyone has been saying that’s what they want for quite awhile.

The first thing that should become a central hub for their services is Google Talk.  It should be working with their other products such as the Google Calendar and even the Google Reader to notify users of upcoming events or recent news. They do have several modules that you can use with the Google Desktop to bring your information together but Vista users, such as myself, may find having another desktop search application redundant.

Copyright © 2013 CyberNetNews.com

Looks like Apple has doubled the size limit for downloading apps over cellular connections alongside

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