Apple brings deep Twitter integration to iOS

Apple’s just announced that it’s bringing deep Twitter integration to all of its iOS-based devices, and to many of its own apps, including Camera, Photos, Safari and Maps. That integration also, of course, extends to Contacts, where you’ll be able to link your contacts to their Twitter handle and keep their information updated accordingly, much like Android. You’ll also only have to sign into Twitter once (in Settings), and then simply share those credentials with any app that requests them.

Apple brings deep Twitter integration to iOS originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 06 Jun 2011 13:58:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Notification Center for iOS 5 announced

It looks like iOS 5 has a new approach to notifications — and we like what we see so far. Notification Center aggregates your various app alerts and eschews the pop-ups for a decidedly Android-esque list that appears at the top of our your screen when you you get a Facebook message, or a tweet, or when you miss a call. Swiping down brings you to the list, and swiping across any instance takes you to the corresponding app. Feast your eyes on the gallery below for a closer look.

Notification Center for iOS 5 announced originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 06 Jun 2011 13:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

WWDC 2011 liveblog: Steve Jobs talks iOS 5, OS X Lion, iCloud and more!

You’re in the right place! Bookmark this page and return on Monday at the times listed below to see Steve Jobs take the stage at Moscone West. WWDC 2011 promises a peek at iOS 5, OS X Lion, the iCloud music storage offering and who knows what else. The iPhone 5? Don’t count on it, but also, don’t count it out. Your town not listed? Shout your time in comments below!

07:00AM – Hawaii
10:00AM – Pacific
11:00AM – Mountain
12:00PM – Central
01:00PM – Eastern
06:00PM – London
07:00PM – Paris
09:00PM – Moscow
02:00AM – Tokyo (June 7th)

Continue reading WWDC 2011 liveblog: Steve Jobs talks iOS 5, OS X Lion, iCloud and more!

WWDC 2011 liveblog: Steve Jobs talks iOS 5, OS X Lion, iCloud and more! originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 06 Jun 2011 12:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

Apple Snips the Cord on iTunes, Reveals iCloud Strategy

11:58 a.m. We’re wrapping up. Thanks for tuning in!

11:57 a.m. Steve says this is Apple’s third data center. It’s in North Carolina. “It’s full of stuff. Full of expensive stuff. We are ready for our customers to start using iCloud, and we can’t wait to get it in their hands.”

11:55 a.m. iTunes Match: You scan and match, annual price is $25. So that’s iTunes Match and it goes along with iTunes in the cloud.

11:53 a.m. “Now there’s one more thing,” Jobs says. It pertains to iTunes in the cloud. There are songs you ripped yourself. There’s iTunes Match. Matches up your library with iTunes store. They’re scanning and matching your library so they don’t need to upload that large part of the memory. Matched songs upgraded to 256kb AAC DRM-free. iTunes Match costs $25 per year.

11:52 a.m. Developers can get hands on iCloud beta today. iTunes in the cloud portion will run for users on iOS 4.3 beta, so everyone can get their hands on it and get it on their devices. iCloud ships with iOS 5 this fall.

11:50 a.m. iCloud stores your content and wirelessly pushes it to all your devices, and it’s integrated with your apps, so everything happens automatically. So how do you get it? You upgrade your iOS device with iOS 5, type in your Apple ID and password, and there’s a switch to turn on iCloud. Everybody gets 5 gigabytes of free storage for Mail, Documents and Backup. They’re not counting music, apps or books toward that 5 gigs, nor are they counting Photo Stream.

11:49 a.m. iTunes in the cloud – you can share music with up to 10 devices. Steve is wrapping up iCloud. All the iCloud-integrated apps are free.

11:48 a.m. Apple shows the iTunes Store on an iPhone. You buy and the song downloads to the iPhone and it’s already on your iPad, too. Now when you buy a song on one device it automatically downloads to all devices without doing any work, and that’s iTunes in the cloud.

11:47 a.m. It’s worth noting that only songs you *purchase* are going to be syncable to the cloud. Doesn’t appear that songs you rip from CDs or pirate are going to be able to sync.

11:46 a.m. “This is the first time we’ve seen this in the music industry. No charge for [dowloading to] multiple devices,” Steve says. They’re demoing it now.

11:45 a.m. Last but not least is iTunes Music. Here’s the big one. For songs you already bought, there’s a Purchase history button and you can see the songs you bought and download to any of your devices at no additional charge.

11:44 a.m. Steve’s back on stage. “Isn’t that awesome?” Summary: Photos you take or import upload to iCloud, iCloud stores each photo for 30 days, devices store last 1,000 photos, and Macs and PCs store all photos.

11:42 a.m. Eddy Cue, VP of internet services, is demonstrating Photos in the cloud. He takes a photo on the iPhone, then picks up an iPad, and the picture is right there in the Photo Stream. Then you can save permanently by moving it to an album. On the Mac, the Photo Stream shows the photo you just took, too.

11:40 a.m. On a Windows PC the Photos app will sync with a Pictures folder. And Photos will sync with Apple TV, too, so you can see the photos right on your Apple TV. One problem we face is that photos are large and consume a lot of memory, so Apple is going to store the last 1,000 photos on devices to free up space. Any photos you want to keep permanently can get moved to an album and they stay forever. On the server photos will be stored for 30 days.

Continue Reading…

Live Blog: Apple to Reveal Next-Gen Mac, iPhone OS at WWDC


Live blog starts at 10 a.m. Pacific, 1 p.m Eastern.

Apple’s Steve Jobs will take the stage Monday morning at San Francisco’s Moscone Center to unleash software upgrades for the Mac and iOS mobile platforms.

Jobs’ keynote kicks off Apple’s annual Worldwide Developers Conference, which runs until Friday. Expect to hear news on Mac OS X Lion and iOS 5, as well as the new iCloud online storage service.

Read Wired.com’s previous coverage for a rundown of what we’ll hear about at the event. Jobs’ keynote starts 10 a.m. PDT, and Wired.com will be live-blogging the event. Stay tuned on this post for the news, or follow @Wired for Twitter updates in 140 characters or less.

Photo: Moscone Center West, San Francisco (Jim Merithew/Wired.com)


MSI’s Afterburner Android app makes GPU overclocking as easy as Facebooking

Back in our day, overclocking one’s PC was akin to a fine art. It took skill. Precision. Effort. Cajones. These days, it’s just about as simple as blinking. Or winking. Or winking while blinking. MSI’s made the simplification of PC overclocking quite the priority over the past few years, with OC Genie and an updated Wind BIOS from last decade putting all sorts of power into the hands of mere mortals. At Computex this week, the outfit took things one step further with the Afterburner Android app. Purportedly, the GPU tool enables users to monitor the temperature, voltage and fan speed of their graphics card via a WiFi connection, and if you’re feeling froggy, you can overclock and overvolt to your heart’s content. Details beyond that are few and far betwixt, but we’re hearing that it’ll soon work with GPUs from other vendors, and that an iOS variant is en route.

Continue reading MSI’s Afterburner Android app makes GPU overclocking as easy as Facebooking

MSI’s Afterburner Android app makes GPU overclocking as easy as Facebooking originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 06 Jun 2011 06:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Far East Gizmos  |  sourceMSI  | Email this | Comments

ComScore: Android grows larger than ever among US subscribers, Apple belittles RIM

The latest ComScore results from the last quarter are in, and the US mobile device wars were hotter than ever as 13% more people reported owning a smartphone. Google conquered most users’ territory with Android climbing just over five percent (now totaling 36.4%) and still claiming first for mobile software platforms. Apple’s iOS destroyer took second place (at 26%) partially due to RIM’s S.S. BlackBerry OS sinking about five percent (now 25.7%) to claim third, while Microsoft and HP / Palm rounded out the bunch struggling to stay in the fight with even lower single-digit scores. In the OEM region Samsung claimed first yet again (although slightly dropping to 24.5%), with LG and Motorola landing in second and third respectively, each keeping its place from the prior quarter. In the last two slots, Apple again bested RIM whose devices barely dropped half of a percent, but enough to let the slight growth of iDevices snatch up 4th. The source link below is waiting to be clicked if you want the full battle statistics.

ComScore: Android grows larger than ever among US subscribers, Apple belittles RIM originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 06 Jun 2011 04:29:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink PhoneArena  |  sourceComScore  | Email this | Comments

MobileNotifier dev snapped up by Apple to work on iOS framework?

We said that MobileNotifier unobtrusive notifications might be the single best reason to jailbreak your iOS device, and it sounds like Apple may agree — Redmond Pie reports that lead developer Peter Hajas has been spirited away by the Cupertino computer company to work on iOS itself. Hajas wrote that he was taking a break from MobileNotifier, and some newfangled detective work dug up the rest — a thinly-veiled reference to Steve Jobs, a tweet mentioning a California “fruit” company, and finally an alleged screenshot of Hajas’ entry in Apple’s employee database. We’re feeling slightly bittersweet about the whole thing, to tell the truth, as while we’d rather not have to smash our iPhone chains, the notion that this is all happening now suggests we won’t see greatly improved notifications in iOS 5, come Monday.

[Thanks, Jeff]

MobileNotifier dev snapped up by Apple to work on iOS framework? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 04 Jun 2011 16:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceRedmond Pie  | Email this | Comments

iTunes leak suggests ‘Automatic Download’ over-the-air updates are coming in iOS 5

In the lead-up to this year’s WWDC, we so far know three things for sure: Apple will unveil OS X Lion, iCloud, and… automatic, over-the-air app updates for iOS 5, apparently. While searching for updates in iTunes, a MacRumors reader stumbled upon this page, which alludes to an “Automatic Download” feature that allows for wireless syncing. Also, the fact that Apple went out of its way to say “…if your device has Automatic Download enabled for apps” makes us wonder what else we’ll soon be able to update over the air. The company has since pulled the tattletale page in iTunes, but MacRumors grabbed a screenshot while it was still live. Looks like the cat’s out of the bag, but we’ll let you know when Jobs & Co. make it official on Monday.

iTunes leak suggests ‘Automatic Download’ over-the-air updates are coming in iOS 5 originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 04 Jun 2011 13:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceMacRumors  | Email this | Comments

PhotoFast i-FlashDrive does USB on one end, 30-pin dock connector on the other

Apple’s iOS devices may lack native memory expansion, but PhotoFast has now come up with solution that just about bests the official camera connection kit. What you’re looking at here is the i-FlashDrive, a memory dongle that sports both a USB plug and an Apple 30-pin dock connector, and it comes in three flavors starting from 8GB at $95 up to 32GB at $180. What’s more, the drive also works with a free Cupertino-approved app that provides both external and internal file management (for music, photos, movies, and more), contact backup, and native MP3 playback. Want one? Then head over to Taiwan for a mid or late June launch, or watch out for its US debut shortly afterwards. Demo video after the break.

Continue reading PhotoFast i-FlashDrive does USB on one end, 30-pin dock connector on the other

PhotoFast i-FlashDrive does USB on one end, 30-pin dock connector on the other originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 04 Jun 2011 09:07:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Stone Ip  |   | Email this | Comments