Tampilkan postingan dengan label iphone. Tampilkan semua postingan
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Minggu, 17 Mei 2009

case-mate has released the Fuel, a new protective phone case. Models exist for both the iPhone 3G and the BlackBerry Bold. A soft-grip holster design is used, built around a rechargeable lithium polymer battery.

The battery adds up to seven hours of life to the Bold, and up to nine hours to the iPhone. If the phones are kept on standby, the battery provides up to 480 hours of power for the Bold and 250 hours for the iPhone. An on/off button can be used to control draw, and three color LED lights indicate the amount of power left. Users need only connect the case through mini USB to charge it.

Both Fuel models can be purchased from the case-mate website for $80.
Apple executives have disclosed several strategies aimed at expanding the company's market share with the iPhone and Mac products. In comments made to Oppenheimer analysts, company officials noted the potential for significant growth of the Mac brand in international markets, which have shown a five-percent revenue growth in Europe while domestic shipments slid by eight percent.

To company considers the iPhone to be "still in its early days and could gain share by: providing more functionality; lowering prices; growing geographically; or segmenting the market with different models," wrote Yair Reiner, an Oppenheimer analyst.

Reiner confirmed that the comments originated with Apple's employees "[T]hey are not saying they will necessarily do all of these," the analyst told AppleInsider. "This is basically the menu of options."

A number of analysts have expected the company to introduce a lower-priced iPhone alongside the flagship device. Mark Abramsky of RBC suggests the new model could omit 3G and GPS functions, along with limit on data usage, but with a $100 price tag and a cheaper data plan.

"Apple said that one thing would be a constant: iPhone will remain a software centric device," Reiner noted. The company appeared to be "particularly excited" about prospects in China, a market that would clearly benefit from a lower entry price.

Many predict Apple will launch an updated iPhone or new models sometime in June or July. Although several reports suggest the announcement will occur during the WWDC keynote, Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster expects the company to hold a surprise media event sometime later.

* PhotoList ($2) is a tool for organizing and locating photos on the iPhone and iPod touch. Users can organize photos into an unlimited number of folders and add titles and ratings. Photos can be moved between different folders allowing users to adjust the file structure as needed. A recent update has also added the ability to upload and download images from Facebook.

* SWIRL ($3) is a game where players must dodge obstacles and collect starts while falling downwards. The game is controlled by tilting the iPhone or iPod touch and includes five different worlds each with its own original soundtrack and an unlimited number of levels of increasing difficulty. The game also features global hi-scores, an in-game chat and integration with Twitter and Facebook via OpenFeint.

* Domino Domino ($1) allows users to create lines of dominos and then knock them over. Players can draw a line on the screen with their finger and dominos will then automatically be placed along that path. Users can also include objects like stairs, bridges and slides to make their domino course more interesting. Once the course is finished a user can choose to manually fly through the environment as the dominos fall or have the camera automatically follow the path.

* Agile Messenger ($10) is a multi-protocol instant messaging client that can access several instant messaging networks including, ICQ, AOL, Yahoo!, MSN, and GoogleTalk. The application allows users to send text, voice and picture messages to any contact and uses IM to Email forwarding to let a user know if they have received a message while using another application. Agile Messenger also includes support for typing in the landscape orientation and allows users to move between chat windows by swiping left and right.

* Elvis Mobile (free) provides users with access news, images, videos, and more that is related to Elvis Presley. The application also provides users with access to a Graceland Livecam that gives fans a live view of the mansion in Memphis. Another features is the ability to report Elvis sightings around the world. When users spot an Elvis lookalike they can snap a picture with their iPhone camera and submit it to Elvis.com or Facebook.
The Princeton Review and Modality Inc. have released The Princeton Review's Vocab Challenge for the iPhone and the iPod touch. The application measures a user's knowledge of 250 words which are frequently included in SAT examinations. The app features four types of timed challenges with questions relating to positive or negative connotations, synonyms, antonyms and definitions.

The application utilizes the Multi-Touch interface, enabling users to quickly select answers by swiping the screen or shaking the device. Performance is tracked, with a display of showing mastered terms. An index of the words is also included, with definitions, audio pronunciations and a section of speech that includes the word.

The Princeton Review's Vocab Challenge is available through the App Store for $5.
Overcoming a small but significant delay, PopCap has at last launched the iPhone version of Peggle, its well-known puzzle game. Players fire a metal ball from the top of the screen, with the goal of knocking out as many blocks as possible before it reaches the bottom. Special bonuses are awarded for unique combos and trick shots.

The iPhone game includes 55 regular levels and 40 Grand Master challenges, which can be chosen individually through the Quick Play or Challenge modes. Gamers can additionally play against others in the Duel mode, and record unusual shots for later playback. Separating the port is a new Extreme Precision wheel, meant increased accuracy, and a series of new style bonuses, such as Off the Wall and Double Long Shot. A Trophy Room now displays unusual achievements in the game.

Peggle is a $5 download from the App Store, and requires iPhone 2.1 firmware.
Apple has begun shipping iPhone orders placed on its online store. The company previously required customers to finalize the sale at a brick-and-mortar Apple Store. The eligibility checks, plan selection and add-on options can now be configured online for new customers, although existing AT&T customers still need to stop in at a retail store location.

The shipping option is now available and can be selected for free.
AT&T's decision to disallow 3G for the iPhone edition of SlingPlayer may have been motivated as much by desires to quash a competitor as it is to avoid congestion, a claim suggests. Although AT&T's official explanation is that streaming TV consumes too much bandwidth, a tip from Gizmodo purports that the carrier has the ulterior motive of crippling SlingPlayer to protect a future U-verse app. Supposedly called i-Verse, it would let subscribers to AT&T's IPTV service either stream live TV over the 3G network or else play shows already recorded on the DVR.

The move would push users to sign up for U-verse rather than use AT&T only for the iPhone service. SlingPlayer technically allows any compatible set-top box to stream its output through a Slingbox and so can work with rival TV providers or third-party DVRs, such as TiVo's devices.

Whether or not this is the motive isn't clear and is potentially controversial as it may run afoul of competition laws. However, AT&T has publicly acknowledge that it wants to tie the iPhone to U-verse and has mentioned moving DVR recordings to iPhones as one of its long-term goals. The source for the new rumor says that i-Verse has been in full development since a private preview earned a favorable reaction last year.

AT&T hasn't yet been available for comment but is expected to deny the allegations.

Critics have noted that, while AT&T claims its terms of service bar streaming live TV over a network, other smartphones like the BlackBerry Bold, Nokia 6650 and multiple Windows Mobile devices can all download SlingPlayer versions that specifically allow streaming over AT&T. The provider has argued that the iPhone is more powerful, though the Bold is theoretically faster and supports more software features, like multitasking.
In brief: My New iPhone, a guide to using the iPhone, will be updated in July following the release of the new iPhone operating system. The current edition can be purchased as a PDF at a reduced price and anyone who pre-orders the new edition will receive this PDF edition for free. Readdle has also announced a sale that offers its ReaddleDocs iPhone application for $5. The application allows users to store files and documents on the iPhone and view them with a built-in document viewer. Meanwhile, Gameloft has released several new screenshots and a trailer for its upcoming game, New York Nights: Success in the City. The game is a life simulation and starts with players arriving in New York trying to start a new and successful life.

No Starch Press is now offering several deals on the current edition of My New iPhone to coincide with the upcoming release of the next edition. The new edition is set to release this July and will add extra information pertaining to the iPhone OS 3.0 release. Anyone interested in the new release can per-order it now and will receive a free electronic copy of the current edition. The electronic version of the current edition is also currently being sold for at a reduced price of $10 and a large portion of the book has been posted on Scribd for free access.

Readdle has announced that it is currently holding a sale on its document and file management application for the iPhone, ReaddleDocs. The application is currently available for $5 representing a 50% price reduction from its usual price and will be available at this price until Sunday, May.17th. Readdle has also announced that it has submitted version 1.5 of ReaddleDocs to the App Store for review. The new version will be able to properly display iWork '09 documents and upload files to WebDAV enabled online file storage systems such as Apple's MobileMe iDisk.

Gameloft recently released several screenshots and a trailer for its upcoming iPhone game, New York Nights: Success in the City. Players start the game by arriving in New York City where the main character is hoping to find success. The game then plays out as a simulation providing players with life choices that affect the outcome of the game. New York Nights includes six famous neighborhoods including Times Square, Chinatown, and Central Park and a number of NPC's that can be interacted with.













Open-Xchange has released its latest server applications, OXteder Mac OS X and OXtender Mobile Web. Both forms of the software enable users to access and edit information and documents stored on the Open-Xchange Server through its native Mac or iPhone applications. Each functions both online and offline, with the server sync updated every time the program is online.

Both forms of OXtender can sync contacts between Open-Xchange and Address Book, as well as appointments and tasks between Open-Xchange and iCal. The Mac version is capable of automatic synchronization with all connected services and devices such as MobileMe, iPhones, iPods, or any other handsets with iSync support.

OXtender is only available to Open-Xchange users. The standard Open-Xchange software costs $675, while OXtender is free for both new and existing users.
Bodelin Technologies has released ProPrompter, a teleprompter application for use with the iPhone or iPod touch. The application enables each mobile device to be used as a teleprompter, with options for screen scrolling, several speed presets, both landscape and portrait modes, and on-screen help. ProPrompter can also be adjusted for improved readability in brighter settings by changing background and text colors.

Users also have free access to the ProPrompter Producer script management website where they can host their text files. The iPhone can access each script instantly by refreshing the script list in the application.

To hold the iPhone while viewing the prompts, Bodelin has released the ProPrompter Wing and the ProMag. Using the application's mirror feature, the ProMag projects a magnified text from the iPhone screen onto a mirror in front of the camera lens. This makes the text twice the size of the iPhone screen. Alternatively, The ProPrompter Wing attaches the iPhone to an adjustable arm next to the camera, which holds the iPhone in landscape mode.

The ProPrompter application is available from the App Store for $10. The ProPrompter Wing and the ProMag are both available from the Bodelin website for $130 and $1000, respectively.
ProjectsWizards has released an update to its Merlin project management application for both the iPhone/iPod touch and Mac, along with a new version of its Merlin Server bringing it to 2.7. The upgrade to Merlin 2.7 allows users to share projects with the iPhone and iPod touch and adds support for the Merlin Server. By enabling the three applications to work together users can access and share their Merlin projects from any iPhone, Mac, or supported web browser.

In addition to the extra support, Merlin 2.7 also includes enhancements to help simplify use, to increase stability, and improve overall performance. Also the new Merlin iPhone and iPod touch version 1.0.1 resolves a connectivity issue that occurred via Bonjour, as well as provides a fix that prevented projects from being synchronized if it contained special characters in the project title.

Both Merlin and Merlin Server are compatible with Mac OS X 10.4.9 or higher, and available for purchase at $200 for Merlin 2 and $995 for a single user licence of Merlin Server. The iPhone and iPod touch version is free to download from the App Store but priced at $65 per-user license.



Japanese developer FreeBit has released an English version of

Jumat, 15 Mei 2009

Freeverse is showcasing four upcoming iPhone and iPod touch games at Macworld Expo: Flick Baseball, SlotZ Racer, Roads of Ruin, and Days of Thunder. Flick Baseball is an arcade baseball game where users can customize their characters and play against other teams. The will include several modes, including full season, exhibition and championship as well as an added feature: home-run competition. Controls for the game have yet to be fully developed.

SlotZ Racer is an iPhone version of the old slot car game, where the person�s car is kept on a track by a small pin sticking out of the bottom of the vehicle. The game will come with pre-defined tracks ranging in difficulty, along with added abilities such as a multiplayer mode, and being able to create custom race tracks.

Roads of Ruin, takes place in the year 2023 after a nuclear war has damaged the world and states are still at war. Players must drive a motorcycle to deliver messages and packages between cities, while fighting off attacks from people after the goods. Money earned from completing deliveries can be used to upgrade the equipment.

Days of Thunder is based on the original motion picture and is currently being developed for Paramount pictures. In the game, players hop into their NASCAR Stock car and race against other drivers around the track. During the race users will have to time when to go in for pit stops, to get gas and replacement tires.

SlotZ Racer will be available from the App Store within a couple of weeks (the release date for the other three games was not provided).

Relatively new competitors now have the advantage in the smartphone business, Microsoft chief Steve Ballmer said late yesterday to the Financial Times (registration required). Although the executive was well-known for believing in early 2007 that the iPhone wouldn't get market share, he now says that both Apple and BlackBerry creator RIM have "clear market momentum" and that the two are part of an industry likely to survive the poor world economy.

During Microsoft's CES keynote speech, Ballmer was nonetheless confident of Windows Mobile and observed that about 20 million devices using the operating system have sold in the past 12 months, 11 of which sold over a million each. The HTC Touch Diamond is one of these and is known to have managed at least 3 million units in the second half of the year.

The early Microsoft official is nonetheless less confident about the Zune and deemphasizes the importance of the music player hardware and insisting that the industry push is now towards software. Ballmer sees media-only devices like the Zune gradually being phased out and that more generalized hardware like smartphones will dominate the field.

He also supports the formal Microsoft position that there will be no Zune phone and that the brand is most likely to survive as a feature of Windows Mobile rather than in Microsoft-desgned hardware.
Alpine took the opportunity at the CES show to introduce three new head units that will soon be available on the market, with the iXA-W404 and nearly identical iDA-X305 and iDA-X303. Neither has a traditional optical disk drive, relying instead on digital media as their soruce files. The W404 has a double DIN form factor in order to better fit into the dashboards of modern cars, while the latter uses a more traditional single-DIN layout. The Digital Media Station iXA-W404 has an iPhone-like interface, where users can glide their fingers over the 4.3-inch touchscreen to navigate their music libraries.

Alpine made sure the W404 can charge and control all generations of dockable iPods and iPhones, incorportating a chip into the head unit that detects whether the charging system requires the old 12V or the 5V feed of the newer products.

The new Digital Media Receivers that are the iDA-X305, which replaces the iDA-X100, and the iDA-X303 feature 2.2-inch screens, with the X305�s a TFT display capable of displaying album art stored on attached iPods or iPhones.
All three new products are Bluetooth, HD radio and satellite radio ready with the addition of Alpine�s add-on modules, and have iTunes tagging capabilities, allowing users to save a song name playing on HD radio for a later purchase through iTunes.

The iXA-W404 will launch in North America sometime in April, with prices set at $550. The iDA-X305 will be available at the end of January with a retail price of $350. The X303, with the same specs and features but a less advanced three-color LCD display with two lines of text will launch at the same time, priced at $250.

Alpine iXA-W404




Alpine iDA-X305


Alpine iDA-X303
Developers at Citrix have been doing some guerilla marketing at Macworld Expo, holding impromptu demonstrations of forthcoming app allowing iPhone users to run Windows. The app is actually an iphone version of the company's XenDesktop thin client software. The virtualization software supports most Windows XP and Vista applications.

In a demonstration for MacNN, developer Chris Fleck showed an iPhone smoothly operating several Windows applications, and displayed a Windows Desktop. Fleck was also able to perform a cut and paste operation within PowerPoint.

Fleck says the company has received a "positive" response from Apple on its efforts, although there's no word when the Citrix iPhone app will be approved and released. He says the app will be made available for free to lure more businesses to its XenApp server software.

Citrix apparently sees a bright future for the iPhone in the medium-to-large business market. Fleck says "demand is coming from the top down," as executives, doctors and other professionals adopt the iPhone and urge their company IT department to support the platform.

Designers at Zagg audio think they've found a niche in the crowded market for iPhone earbuds: eliminating tangles. Z.buds are equipped with stiffer, yet sturdier nylon cables that are not likely to bunch together into a tangled mess, the company says. A quick hands-on demo at CES shows the technology does appear to work -- the Z.buds were hard to tangle even when wadded up.

At about $80, most users will want more than just tangle reduction, and Zagg has added several other features to justify the price tag. A noise-cancelling microphone is built-in, along with a button to answer calls and control music playback. There is also an in-line volume control, several sets of soft adaptors for different ear sizes, and a handy button loop for keeping the cord from dangling.

Available in red or black, Z.buds ship with the special 3.5mm plug that works on the iphone without an adaptor. The buds work with other phones as well, according to Zagg. The 10mm speakers are billed as high-end, with a 20Hz to 20KHz frequency response. Available in red or black, Z.buds are available now online, although the black model is backordered until early February.





As part of its larger CES campaign, Sony has upgraded its
Senior officials from Australian carrier Telstra claims on Monday that HTC is developing a smartphone that would trump devices from Apple and Palm. The executives, who observed some of the competition at CES this past week, say HTC has a touchscreen device in the works which is "better and more functional" than either the iPhone or the just-unveiled Pre and should have both a larger display than existing HTC phones as well as custom software written by the phone maker itself; the inaugural T-Mobile G1 currently uses only Google's stock software.

While primarily dismissive of the iPhone, the Telstra staff notes that Palm's phone has yet to reach the market and so has yet to really compete. The unnamed HTC device isn't expected to ship until the spring, or roughly the same time as the Pre reaches Sprint.

Whether or not the Telstra statements are accurate is unknown. Both the Touch HD and MAX 4G have 3.8-inch, 800x480 touchscreens and are considered large among smartphones; however, the reference may instead be to HTC's more widespread devices, such as the 2.8-inch Touch Diamond and Touch Pro.

The Taiwan-area company is best-known for its Windows Mobile phones but has already said it expects its second phone to ship in April.
Software-as-a-service company Servoy has released the iPhone Application Builder, a tool meant to simplify web application development for iPhones and iPod touches. The tool is said to run on any SQL database, whether local or hosted online, and support the creation of business-oriented apps without any necessary programming expertise, thanks to the use of a special mini-IDE. The Builder takes metadata from databases and tables and generates all forms and objects.

Each form created through the tool can be assigned to use a different table or database, and the results can be natively previewed in their final form. Running the Builder first requires downloading the Community Edition of Servoy Developer, which includes five free client licenses.