Let me start this out by saying I didn’t "hack" something in the black hat Hackers way, but by finding a market inefficiency and leveraging it to my advantage. It must be the day trader in me. No harm was done to any computers or systems in the making of this post.
You’ve had a day to renew your membership, book plane tickets and beg, borrow or steal $1,600 from your neighbors. Now it’s time to sit on the WWDC homepage and find out if you’ll actually be able to attend Apple’s annual software shindig. The tickets go on sale in just an hour, so here’s a friendly heads-up that you should get a cup of coffee, charge that battery pack and practice hitting F5, just in case.
Update: We’ve just seen a new definition of fast. As developers have noticed, Apple sold out of WWDC tickets in about two minutes — and possibly sooner than that.
Filed under: Software, HD, Mobile, Apple
Source: Apple
In case you haven’t noticed, we really, really want you at our inaugural Expand extravaganza this March 16-17! We wanted to take a moment and recap the highlights of the show we have planned so you have it all in one place (and because, let’s be real, everyone loves a list):
1) Even more reasonable ticket prices!
We want to make sure Expand is as accessible to as many of you as possible so we’re knocking the ticket prices for all of the above back to $50 if you buy them in advance. We’re also instituting day pass pricing for those of you unable to attend the show both days. A $35 ticket gets you into Saturday’s show plus our after-party from 8 to midnight, and only $25 gets you in for Sunday. Parents, kids under 13 get in absolutely free so please bring the family for a day of hands-on technology fun!
Of course, we know many of you have variable schedules and aren’t sure if you’ll be able to make the show ahead of time. We’ll also be selling tickets at the door for $60 for the full weekend or $40 for just Saturday and $30 for just Sunday. And if you’ve already purchased Expand tickets, check the email you used to register for info about a refund (we won’t leave you hanging!). If you didn’t receive the email or have other questions about your tickets, please hit us up at tickets at engadget dot com and we’ll help you out.
Read on for nine more reasons…
Filed under: Announcements, Meta
Buy tickets for the Rihanna tour on Facebook? Maybe soon. Facebook is reportedly testing a feature that would let you do just that. More »
The scene: your girlfriend and/or boyfriend (hey, nothing wrong with polyamory) got you tickets to The Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo. You’ve been waiting your whole life to see those goats up close, so naturally, you want to post pictures of your beloved gift on Facebook, rubbing it in all your friends’ rodeo-less faces. Here’s a tip: don’t. Because someone will steal it. More »
TigerText adds secure messaging to Dropbox in bid to rid the world of bicycle couriers
Posted in: Today's ChiliSecure messaging outfit TigerText has mixed its sauce with Dropbox’s API to make a private communications goulash that could spell doom for the humble bicycle courier. The technological team-up enables users to share documents with a pre-set lifespan and recall an attachment if you really didn’t mean to send your boss so many cat pictures. Thanks to its HIPAA-compliant encryption, the documents you push around cannot be downloaded, copied or forwarded, making it ideal for law firms, medical agencies and movie studios that currently blow thousands of dollars on using messengers to take secret stuff ’round town.
Filed under: Internet, Software
TigerText adds secure messaging to Dropbox in bid to rid the world of bicycle couriers originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Jul 2012 18:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
New York MTA announces smartphone-based ticketing trials aboard Metro-North Railroad
Posted in: Today's ChiliLike big sodas, paper ticket stubs may soon become a thing of the past in New York. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority has announced that, come next month, its employees will begin trials of a smartphone-based ticketing system aboard the Metro-North Railroad. While the grand experiment is currently closed to the public, it’s said that railroad workers will use their Android, BlackBerry and iPhone handsets to purchase rail tickets, which may then be validated directly from their smartphone. During the trial, the new system will be compared to the current purchasing scheme that combines both ticket machines and on-board purchases. Should everything prove successful, the MTA will expand the Metro-North’s new system to all-comers. Transit-minded folks will find the full PR after the break.
[Image credit: Masabi (Flickr)]
Filed under: Cellphones, Transportation, Software
New York MTA announces smartphone-based ticketing trials aboard Metro-North Railroad originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 12 Jul 2012 04:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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