iOS 4.2 beta 2 now available for iPhone, iPad developers

Hey, would you look at that: if you’re a developer, you can download iOS 4.2 beta 2. We’re installing it right now, and we’ll let you know as soon as we see what’s new — but we’re hoping it fixes some of the nasty bugs we grappled with in beta 1.

Update: We’ve only used beta 2 for a couple minutes, but it’s already so much less buggy than beta 1 we’re weeping with joy.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

iOS 4.2 beta 2 now available for iPhone, iPad developers originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Sep 2010 19:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceApple  | Email this | Comments

Sony’s PlayStation division looking for engineers with Android dev experience

It’s been just over a month since we broke the news that Sony’s working on an Android 3.0-based gaming phone with PlayStation branding, and a new job posting seems to indicate that progress is being made — the PlayStation division is looking for a senior server engineer in London with “experience in mobile development, specifically Android.” The rest of the listing sounds like this person will be involved in running an online game service, which certainly makes sense; Sony would do well to counter Xbox Live on Windows Phone 7 and Apple’s Game Center with PSN on their own device. Either that, or this just means nothing — but you know us, we’re eternal optimists.

[Thanks, Saad073]

Sony’s PlayStation division looking for engineers with Android dev experience originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Sep 2010 17:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Android Central  |  sourceSony  | Email this | Comments

HP says webOS tablets to be ‘similar to the iPad’

HP’s been saying it’ll use webOS on a tablet since the first moment it bought Palm, but it looks like things are starting to pick up ahead of that “early 2011” due date — in an email to the Palm Developer Community, HP’s Peter Helm says webOS will be used on “tablet-style devices similar to the iPad.” Check it:

Now that we are officially part of HP, we are going full speed ahead with our applications initiative. Our proprietary operating system, webOS, is now the OS that will be used in HP’s mobile devices. This includes mobile handsets as well as tablet-style devices similar to the iPad. We will accordingly leverage Palm’s ability to innovate and the scale of HP’s vast install base and distribution network previously unavailable to us.

Yeah, that’s pretty much the Rorschach test of seemingly-innocuous quotes; you can read it as anything from a meaningless passing reference to the market leader to an overt hint that we’ll be looking at an ARM-based device with a 9-inch display and a lengthy battery life. The possibilities are endless — let’s just hope whatever Palm and HP are actually working on delivers on the enormous promise of the platform.

[Thanks, Pierre-Marc]

HP says webOS tablets to be ‘similar to the iPad’ originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Sep 2010 15:09:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Microsoft demoes Twitter and Netflix apps for Windows Phone 7, releases final dev tools

Digg
Coming this holiday season to a Windows Phone 7 phone near you: Twitter, Netflix, Flixster, OpenTable, and Travelocity apps. The adroit coders behind those slices of software have managed to put together enough eye candy for Microsoft to highlight them as part of its announcement that the WP7 developer tools have been finalized. It doesn’t sound like anything dramatic has changed from the beta — which seems fitting given how close to the actual launch we now are — but a new Bing Maps Control SDK has been issued, allowing access to a cornucopia of map-related coding opportunities. We’re sure you’re just over the moon about that. Go past the break for a couple of Microsoft’s demo vids as well as a little Seesmic teaser or click the source for more.

Continue reading Microsoft demoes Twitter and Netflix apps for Windows Phone 7, releases final dev tools

Microsoft demoes Twitter and Netflix apps for Windows Phone 7, releases final dev tools originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Sep 2010 12:01:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceWindows Phone Developer Blog  | Email this | Comments

OpenFeint PlayTime brings cross-platform multiplayer gaming to iOS, Android

Looks like options for iOS gamers are only expanding. Not only has Apple just announced the new Game Center, but Aurora Feint has just announced that its OpenFeint social network will soon enable interconnectivity between iOS and Android. The service, called OpenFeint PlayTime, will allow multiplayer gameplay between both platforms — in addition to matchmaking, game servers, and real-time voice chat during gameplay. If you’re a developer, and you’re interested in adding cross-platform multiplayer to your next game, hit up the source link to apply for the private Beta. And now you’ll have to excuse us — we were in the middle of a rousing game of Bomberman Touch 2.

OpenFeint PlayTime brings cross-platform multiplayer gaming to iOS, Android originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Sep 2010 10:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Joystiq  |  sourceOpenFeint Developers  | Email this | Comments

Windows Phone 7 dev tools go gold September 16, Marketplace taking submissions in October

Microsoft’s held the line since its February announce that Windows Phone 7 is going to be ready in time for the holidays this year — and from what we’ve seen recently, we believe it — so today they’re announcing another small step in the process by finalizing the dev tools that first bowed at MIX in March. Specifically, the gold build will be hitting streets on September 16, just a little under a month from today, while the Marketplace will start accepting apps sometime in early October. Now, if you want to throw a little conjecture at this and make a few assumptions along the way, you could reasonably argue that Microsoft wants a healthy catalog of apps available for purchase on launch day one and that it’ll probably take them at least a week or two to approve those first titles — which means that if everything goes perfectly, we could theoretically see retail hardware on shelves by the end of October. Again, that’s purely conjecture on our part, but it’s pretty juicy to think that we could be playing with a Cetus in around two months’ time, isn’t it?

Windows Phone 7 dev tools go gold September 16, Marketplace taking submissions in October originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 Aug 2010 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceWindows Phone Developer Blog  | Email this | Comments

Google sells out of Nexus Ones for devs, ‘working hard’ to get more; SLCD not alleviating backorders yet

The Nexus One retail situation has been pretty dire since Google humanely put down its own online store, leaving only paid developers with an easy option to get an unlocked unit (and only an AWS 3G version at that). Now, even that’s been taken away — at least temporarily — thanks to unexpectedly strong demand that left Google to “blow through the (substantial) initial inventory in almost no time” and run up a backorder with HTC. Interestingly, Google specifically points out that HTC is doing a good job with manufacturing despite the AMOLED shortage, which leads us to wonder whether the SLCD version is shipping in quantity yet — and considering how the Nexus One and Desire are well into midlife, we wonder whether it makes sense to even bother at this point when we’ve got next-gen products just around the corner. Good news is that Google still seems committed to getting Nexus Ones back in stock for developers, we just don’t know when that’s going to happen.

Google sells out of Nexus Ones for devs, ‘working hard’ to get more; SLCD not alleviating backorders yet originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Aug 2010 15:22:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAndroid Developers  | Email this | Comments

Nexus One lives on as Google’s official developer phone

Well, it looks like the now slightly dated Google Ion finally has an official successor — Google has just announced that the Nexus One is its new developer phone. It apparently remains unchanged from the recently-axed consumer model, however, and Google notes that it will ship with Android 2.1 but receive Android 2.2 shortly after you turn it on. Got your developer credentials handy? Then you can log in and get your order in right now for $529.

Update: We just got a look at the specs on Google’s developer site and it looks like the Nexus One on offer is unfortunately T-Mobile only. Check out the tell-tale bands for yourself after the break.

Update 2: The specs mention that the device has “no root access” and that the bootloader is locked, but we’re taking this to mean it’s no different from any other Nexus One you’d buy. More ominously, though, it says that fastboot isn’t enabled, which leads us to wonder whether this is going to cause problems with bootloader unlocks in the field. Let’s keep our fingers crossed. Thanks, Carson!

Continue reading Nexus One lives on as Google’s official developer phone

Nexus One lives on as Google’s official developer phone originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Aug 2010 11:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAndroid Developers Blog  | Email this | Comments

Apple iOS 4.1 beta 2 now available for developers

Developers, developers, developers: Apple is now seeding the second iteration of the iOS 4.1 beta your way. It’s been just shy of two weeks since beta 1 hit the scene, which is about on par with the pace of revisions for previous beta releases. We haven’t had a chance yet to dive in and see what changes are afoot, but we’re downloading now and will be sure to let you know if we notice anything.

[Thanks, Brad]

Apple iOS 4.1 beta 2 now available for developers originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 27 Jul 2010 19:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Redmond Pie  |   | Email this | Comments

Samsung’s Windows Phone 7 prototype slipping out to Imagine Cup finalists

You thought about shipping off to Warsaw for the Imagine Cup 2010 finals, didn’t you? ‘Tis a shame you didn’t, because Microsoft is fixing to hand out Windows Phone 7 prototypes to every last finalist at the show (around 400, we’re hearing). The winning team has already received their handsets after receiving a mighty round of applause from developing Beastware, and while it’s impossible to tell from images so far, the phones that they acquired look to be the same as the Samsung device we toyed with back in June. Funny — we reckoned the finalists at a show like this would be in that elusive Kin generation.

Update: Microsoft just pinged us with a clarification. Only the Rockstar Award winners are getting prototype devices today, with the rest of the finalists on a list to receive “a retail Windows Phone 7 device when and where they become available.”

[Image courtesy of artificialignorance]

Samsung’s Windows Phone 7 prototype slipping out to Imagine Cup finalists originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 08 Jul 2010 15:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink MobileTechWorld  |  sourceTwitter [@imaginecup], [@ai]  | Email this | Comments