BBM for Android will look like this: beta tester gives you the tour (video)

BBM for Android Beta tester give you the tour video

BlackBerry Messenger’s trip to iOS and Android is taking longer than we hoped, but when walkthrough videos are starting to leak out, it’s a good sign that you’re on the final stretch. Courtesy of JT and BlackBerryOS, we’ve now got an early peek of what it’ll look like when the app eventually lands. Combining BBM’s rigorous chat app with our favorite Android keyboards sounds mighty tempting and it appears the app follows the bezel-swiping navigation of the BlackBerry 10 OS to get to your chat threads and groups. The video walkthrough (included after the break) also touches on the ability to transfer contacts through NFC, which is good sign that the messaging app will make the most of these the new mobile OSes.

Update: Within minutes of posting, the video’s gone private. At least we’ll have the memories, right? We’re back!

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Via: CrackBerry

Source: BlackBerryOS

Adobe Releases Acrobat 3D

This article was written on January 23, 2006 by CyberNet.

Adobe Releases Acrobat 3D

Adobe has released Acrobat 3D software which is geared towards CAD Developers. They want to push for the use of PDF files in design documents so that the documents can easily be shared with suppliers, partners, and customers. In order to view the documents all you need to have is the Adobe Reader 7.0 which will help make this an industry standard. The suggested price for this software is $995 though!

Software Source: Adobe

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Refresh Roundup: week of August 26th, 2013

Refresh Roundup week of August 26th, 2013

Your smartphone and / or tablet is just begging for an update. From time to time, these mobile devices are blessed with maintenance refreshes, bug fixes, custom ROMs and anything in between, and so many of them are floating around that it’s easy for a sizable chunk to get lost in the mix. To make sure they don’t escape without notice, we’ve gathered every possible update, hack, and other miscellaneous tomfoolery we could find during the last week and crammed them into one convenient roundup. If you find something available for your device, please give us a shout at tips at engadget dawt com and let us know. Enjoy!

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Store Files on iPhone with App… Free for 2-weeks Only

This article was written on September 10, 2008 by CyberNet.

air sharing.jpgOne thing that really sucks with the iPhone and iPod Touch is that neither of them can be used to store files. When you have that much storage space available to you, being able to store files would be really nice. There are a handful of programs in the App Store you can use to store some types of files on your iPhone, but the only downside is that most of these apps are $5 and above.

Luckily for you Avatron is offering their new Air Sharing app (iTunes link) for free for the first two weeks (release date was September 8th, 2008). With it you can wirelessly transfer these various types of files from a Windows, Mac, or Linux machine. Here’s a quick list of the different file formats that Air Sharing supports:

  • iWork (Pages, Numbers, and Keynote), full resolution if saved with preview
  • Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, and PowerPoint), with limited support for XML formats
  • Web Archive (web-page downloads packaged by Safari)
  • Web page
  • PDF
  • HTML
  • RTF (Rich Text Format)
  • RTFD (TextEdit documents with embedded images)
  • Plain text (many different file extensions), with Unicode support
  • Source code (C/C++, Objective C/C++, C#, Java, Javascript, XML, shell scripts, Perl, Ruby, Python, and more), with color-coded formatting
  • Movie (standard iPhone formats: H.264, MPEG-4, 3GPP, etc.)
  • Audio (standard iPhone formats: MP3 VBR, AAC, Audible, Apple Lossless, AIFF, WAV, CAF, etc.)
  • Image (standard iPhone formats: GIF, PNG, JPG, TIFF, etc.)

It’s a little disappointing that these programs can’t support other types of files, but on the plus side you can preview all of those documents right on your iPhone. The syntax-highlighting for code files is particularly cool.

Make sure you grab Air Sharing from the iTunes Store while it’s free. After the first two weeks it will be $6.99. Man, I wish more of the paid apps did this. 😉

[via TUAW]

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XBMC: More Advanced Settings

This article was written on May 10, 2012 by CyberNet.

Xbmc

While XBMC is a versatile piece of software there are always a lot of things that advanced users wish they could configure, but the developers can’t possible cram it all into the XBMC interface. That’s where the advancedsettings.xml file comes into play. This file will let you adjust a dizzying number of settings that are not configurable any other way, and gives you even more control over your XBMC experience.

You’ll find the advancedsettings.xml file in your profile folder:

  • Mac: ~/Library/Application Support/XBMC/userdata/
  • Windows: %appdata%\XBMC\userdata\

Once in your profile directory find and open up the advancedsettings.xml file, or create the file if it doesn’t already exist. After you’ve got the file open you can start changing some of the hundreds of settings that are available.

What settings have I changed? I’ve covered a few in past guides including setting up a media library that is shared amongst multiple machines, and I’ve even provided configuration tips to help resolve buffering issues. I have a few other tweaks that I haven’t mentioned yet…

Video Library:

There are several settings that I change related to the video libraries:

<videolibrary>
<flattentvshows>2</flattentvshows>
<hideemptyseries>true</hideemptyseries>
<recentlyaddeditems>50</recentlyaddeditems>
</videolibrary>

Here is what each of them mean:

  • flattentvshows (2): Shows all episodes for a TV show at the same level rather than sorting them by season.
  • hideemptyseries (true): Hides TV shows that don’t have any episodes in them. This is especially useful if you delete shows after you watch them.
  • recentlyaddeditems (50): Increases the number of items that are displayed in the recently added list.

Splash Screen:

This is a simple setting that disables the splash screen when XBMC is starting up. It’s something a lot of people probably won’t care about changing, but since it is available I thought it wouldn’t hurt to turn it off:

<splash>false</splash>

Debug Log:

I don’t always use this, but if I’m trying to troubleshoot a problem it can be useful. This will let you adjust how much info gets logged:

<loglevel hide="false">1</loglevel>

These are what the various values are used for:

  • -1: All logging is OFF
  • 0: Normal logging, only logging errors (Default)
  • 1: Debug logging
  • 2: Debug logging with free memory, frames-per-second and CPU usage shown on screen
  • 3: Debug logging with free memory, frames-per-second and CPU usage shown on screen; Plus full SMB logging

CyberNet’s XBMC Guides:

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So You Wanna Change Your Default Browser In Vista?

This article was written on August 11, 2006 by CyberNet.

I have been using Vista Beta 2 for a while now and there is one thing that continues to frustrate me. Microsoft has designed the User Account Control (UAC) to work so perfectly that it will be difficult for the average person to switch the default browser. After installing Vista you can open up the Control Panel and the first thing that I do is switch to the classic view. Opening up the Default Programs module and looking at the setting for Internet Explorer reveals that it is set to the default browser:

Vista Default Browser

Not surprising, right? Like Microsoft would ship Vista with Firefox or Opera…even though it would be funny if someone slipped it in before it was sent to RTM 🙂 . That’s besides the point because I just want to download Firefox, install it, and set it to be my default browser so that I don’t have to worry about IE opening up my links. That’s what I did and once I ran Firefox for the first time it asked if I wanted to set it to be the default browser…of course I do!

Vista Default Browser

I continued on with my browsing and when I get done I closed Firefox. Later on I returned to my computer, ran Firefox, and I was presented with the same window asking if I would like to set Firefox as the default browser. At this point I was thoroughly confused and I returned to the Default Programs in the Control Panel only to see that IE is still my default browser! Then it clicks! I have to run Firefox as an administrator so that I am authorizing Vista to change my personal setting. I right-clicked on my Firefox icon and selected “Run As Administrator”:

Vista Default Browser

Then I confirm that I authorized this action:

Vista Default Browser

Finally I agree to set Firefox as my default browser, again! This time it works and if I take a look at the Default Programs in the Control Panel I can see the change I just made:

Vista Default Browser

Is this really a great security feature or just a headache? At first I thought it was a security feature but then I decided to do a little experiment. I opened IE and when I was prompted to switch my default browser back to Internet Explorer I chose the “yes” option. Guess what, it did switch my browser back to Internet Explorer without ever having to run it as an administrator. I am still quite perplexed at this and I am hoping that the issue is on Mozilla’s end for not making the program get the proper permission to change the setting. I really hope this isn’t Redmond’s way of mocking Mozilla’s “Take Back The Web” slogan by replacing it with their own “Take Back The Market Share”.

Copyright © 2013 CyberNetNews.com

Firefox 3 Vulnerability Found in 5-hours

This article was written on June 19, 2008 by CyberNet.

firefox vulnerable.jpgMozilla has got to be happy that they’re Firefox 3 web browser has received over 12 million downloads since Tuesday, but it took only five hours for the browser’s first critical vulnerability to be discovered. Luckily details about the vulnerability have not been made public, and Mozilla has said that there’s no known exploit for the bug at this time.

At this point very little is known about the vulnerability other than the fact that you would have to click on a link to initiate it:

Successful exploitation of the vulnerability could allow an attacker to execute arbitrary code. Not unlike most browser based vulnerabilities that we see these days, user interaction is required such as clicking on a link in email or visiting a malicious web page.

For those of you running Firefox 2 still… you’re not immune to this either. This affects both Firefox 2 and Firefox 3, and Mozilla is already working on a patch to plug the hole. I guess that means you’ll want to exercise caution when clicking on unknown links, but then again you should always be doing that. 😉

Mozilla Blog [via CNet]

Copyright © 2013 CyberNetNews.com

Avant Browser Update 10.1.038 Now Released

This article was written on December 26, 2005 by CyberNet.

Avant Browser

It may be Christmas, but that didn’t stop Avant Browser from releasing an update. Version 10.1.038 adds some new features that are nice to keep up-to-date. Some of these updated features are in JavaScript handling, the popup blocker, and the RSS Reader. Avant Browser is great if you are looking for an Internet Explorer alternative that includes tabs. It is also updated about once a month and has a highly dedicated fan base that is constantly communicating through the forums.

Download: Avant Browser

Copyright © 2013 CyberNetNews.com

Apple support vacation blackout dates suggest September iPhone launch

A document has surfaced today from the inner realm of Apple product support that suggests the dates between and including September 15th through the 29th will not be available for employee vacation. This range of dates for a blackout provided by AppleInsider suggest something very similar to what we saw earlier this week from T-Mobile […]

Google acquires WIMM Labs for smartwatch finesse

If you’ve not heard a lot of chatter out of WIMM Labs over the past few months, there may be a very big reason why: it’s been reported today that Google acquired the company as early as a year ago. While it’s not immediately apparent why this news has broken just now, GigaOM suggests that […]