The iPhone Blog


iPhone Live! 3.1 Beta! Tonight 8pm EDT/5pm PDT

Posted: 01 Jul 2009 03:15 PM PDT

TiPb iPhone Live-Cast!

iPhone Live! comes to you tonight (Wednesday, July 1) at 8pm EDT/5pm PDT.

As always, pre-show will start about 10 min. before if you want to drop by early and reserve a space in our all new, all roomier chat room. See you then!

Join in via http://www.tipb.com/live

Chat with you soon!

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

iPhone Live! 3.1 Beta! Tonight 8pm EDT/5pm PDT


Apple Updates MobileMe WebApps… A Little

Posted: 01 Jul 2009 02:06 PM PDT

MobileMe WebApp New Look

Apple has once again made some service improvements to MobileMe:

We recently updated the web applications at me.com. In Mail, you can now see your unread message count in your Inbox and in each of your Mail folders, and forwarding or replying to HTML (rich text) messages now maintains the messages’ original formatting. In addition, there is a direct link to Help in the toolbar. See this support article for more details and a summary of other improvements.

Coming on the heels of WWDC 2009 related improvements, like Find my iPhone, MobileMe updates continue to more closely resemble the steady, iterative process that best suits the web applications model, rather than the big splashy event releases of classic hardware and software. Kudos to Apple for that.

Now how about that iDisk App? :)

[via MobileMe News and TUAW]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

Apple Updates MobileMe WebApps… A Little


Apple’s New iPhone 3GS Commercials Focus on New Features

Posted: 01 Jul 2009 01:50 PM PDT

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Two new iPhone 3GS commercials are now being aired by Apple, the first one focusing on cut, copy, and paste and the second on Voice Control.

While it’s interesting that the original iPhone 2G commercials were targeted at “the internet in your pocket” and the iPhone 3G commercials at “there’s an app for that”, new features aside, we’re not sure what overarching theme Apple’s going for this time — if any.

Some internet coverage has been less than kind about the new direction, however, welcoming Apple to cut, copy, and paste about a decade too late. That’s a little “inside baseball”, however. While many tech-savvy users — and bloggers — upgraded to the iPhone from Treos, BlackBerrys, or other smartphones, arguably most of the iPhone’s growth has come from consumer adaption — people who upgraded from Motorola RAZRs.

For them, and many of the close to 20 million iPhone users (2G, 3G, and 3GS alike) now able to run iPhone 3.0, copy, cut, and paste will be a decidedly new experience and one whose ease-of-use they’ll likely enjoy.

[Via Apple.com]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

Apple’s New iPhone 3GS Commercials Focus on New Features


Wednesday Fun Video: iPhone 3GS Real Racing Tech Demo

Posted: 01 Jul 2009 08:04 AM PDT

Firemint has put up the above video tech demo of their Real Racing game running optimized for an iPhone 3GS and…. wow.

"Since the game uses a high fidelity physics engine, adding cars is a good test for pushing the hardware. We started our tech demo with 8 cars on the track, then 10, 12, 16 and 20, and the 3GS still didn't break a sweat," wrote Firemint's Alexandra Peters. "We finally stopped when we got to 40 cars on the track at the same time, still with no perceptible drop in frame rate. We think the results are mind blowing."

No plans to release an iPhone 3GS version yet but again, that’s a switch that some developer will no doubt throw at some point.

[Via Macworld via Firemint]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

Wednesday Fun Video: iPhone 3GS Real Racing Tech Demo


Quick App: Reportage Twitter “Radio Tuner” for iPhone

Posted: 01 Jul 2009 07:05 AM PDT

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If the iPhone and Twitter go together like chocolate and peanut butter, then for the most part current iPhone Twitter client developers give us many variations of the peanut butter cup. Tasty confections though they may be, and each unique and delicious in their own right, at the end they still tend towards variations of the peanut butter cup.

Enter Reportage from wherecloud [$2.99 - iTunes link], which rearranges those twin flavors like nouveau cuisine, utterly deconstructed and left for you to explore.

Too obscure? Okay, rewind. Reportage bills itself as a “radio tuner” for Twitter where followers are treated like stations on the FM dial and you can tune in (or tune out) to what they’re saying, and spin the dial to move from user “station” to user “station”.

It should be noted at the beginning that Reportage isn’t a general purpose Twitter workhouse. There are tons of those already. Like Birdhouse, which models itself on a “notebook” writing experience for Twitter, Reportage has also chosen to focus on one specific concept — pseudo-”live broadcast” of the Twitter users you follow.

Keep that in mind as we go along…

World View

Reportage is a single account Twitter client, so the setup is simple enough.

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Once you’re done and enter — or subsequently launch Reportage — you’re placed into World view and presented with iPhone home screen-sized icons of the people you’re following, badged with the number of new tweets they’ve made since last you checked. The icons seem to be sorted by how recently they’ve tweeted, and only those that have tweeted fairly recently are shown.

There’s a refresh button top-right you can hit to update, at which point a a golden-yellow, highly contrasting status bar drops down at the top to give you visual reassurance something is really happening, and in a very nice touch, the icons animate as they fly around to re-order themselves.

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Tap on an icon and you get a list view of that person’s tweets along with @mentions from people you also follow (with avatar for easy visual separation). If they’ve @mentioned you, it’s highlighted in green. A more button at the end does just what more buttons at the end tend to do.

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The most interesting UI concept is found at the bottom of the list: the manifestation of the above-mentioned “radio tuner” — the other active user icons arrange themselves in a horizontal band and you can flick through them, a vertical band just like an old-style radio, indicating which one is currently tuned in. To highlight attention to UI detail, if you flick to a point in-between two icons, Reportage will drift on or back and center itself on the closest one.

Needless to say, you then get the newly “tuned” person’s tweet list.

Profile View

Tap on a tweet and you get that user’s name, follower count, and location along with the contents of the tweet and a date stamp.

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I didn’t see nor could I find any “in reply to” indicator or button to allow tracing back through the reply train, which is something I personally do quite often but doesn’t really fit the “radio tuner” metaphor. Also, no indicator of which client was used to post the tweet, which is something that admittedly only client aficionados may miss.

If an @mention is in the tweet, tapping it brings up a webview of that user’s twitter.com/[username] page which is a tad disjointing. It would be nice if that could stay part of the Reportage user experience.

Tapping on an avatar (presented if the user is in your current World view) will take you to the Reportage profile page, however.

Tapping the small info icon at the bottom right brings up a screen displaying fuller stats, including followers, following, and updates, Twitter bio, homepage, etc. as well as a Follow/Unfollow toggle.

Interestingly, there’s also a Mute/Unmute toggle, which nicely fits the radio metaphor. Muted users are still displayed everywhere I could see, however an icon overlay shows that they’ve been muted. (I’m tempted to use the feature just for tweeting screenshots, however…)

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Along the bottom are options to reply, resend (which uses the RT/re-tweet rather than via approach), message (direct message/DM), and star/unstar.

Star, which might be confused with Twitter’s own public “favorite” system, in Reportage allows you to favorite a user. Favored users get a star icon overlay and seem to become sticky in the World view so they don’t disappear if they’ve become tweeting slackers, momentarily or otherwise. It also gives them a place on the separate Star View screen we’ll get to later.

Composing Tweets

Heading back to the World view, the “compose new tweet” icon is top left and provides exactly the needed typing, location, picture adding, and trashing (clearing current contents) functionality you need.

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Star View

Tabs along the bottom let you switch from Wold view to other views. Next in line is the aforementioned Star view, which is identical but contains only your Starred, or favored, twitter users.

At this point it’s important to remember that caveat about users only tending to exist if they’re in the World view. Combined with @mention links going to webviews rather than in-Reportage pages, it makes adding less-frequent twitter uses a challenge. For example, I wanted to add Dieter to my Star view — and while I may be the archetypal “dumb user” — I just couldn’t find a way to do it other than to wait and see if he’d pop up in my World view eventually.

Those who appreciate the concept of groups if not their complexity might find the Star view suits their needs very well.

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Local view

Next along is Local view, which provides a list of location-based tweets within a user-selectable 1, 5, or 15 miles.

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Me view

Last is your own [Username], or Me view. Tapping on your own view gives you a list of your recent tweets interleaved with @mentions sent in your general direction.

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A Public/Private button lets you toggle to direct messages rather than @mentions. Somewhat confusingly to me at least, the dark rather than light button represents the current state, and labels not withstanding, hitting either button at any time switches between the two states. However, DMs are distinguished by a purple/burgundy color rather than green color so it’s apparent enough which type you’re looking at.

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Again here, Reportage seems to limit you to users currently in your World view. Dieter, for example, @mentioned me yesterday wasn’t there, while someone more active who hadn’t @mentioned me for 5 days was.

Note, you can exit Reportage, go to Settings > Reportage > Filter and change the World filter anywhere from 1 hour, 1 day, 1 week, or none (no filtering). This didn’t expand the amount of users in my World view, however, but it did seem to increase the amount of @mentions in my [username] view. I still couldn’t get to Dieter, though, as the “more” loading stopped going back as far (12 hours only). My conclusion: Reportage doesn’t much care for Dieter.

(Joking, of course. We have every confidence wherecloud is working to address some of this — as appropriate to their app’s focus — in an update release.)

Conclusion

So this Quick App turned into anything but. Sorry for that. Blame Reportage for engaging my Twitter geek. Now, I can’t help coming back to Birdhouse by way of comparison. In Reportage we have another innovative take on a specialized, focused Twitter application designed to address the shortcomings of general purpose clients.

With the “radio tuner” metaphor, in keeping with Gruber’s Design Playground theory, Reportage works amazingly well at presenting and navigating current views of the Twitter users you follow, all wrapped up in a startlingly good UI.

Can’t wait to see where wherecould goes with it next.

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

Quick App: Reportage Twitter “Radio Tuner” for iPhone


iPhone Dev-Team: ultrasn0w Users Avoid iPhone 3.1 Beta!

Posted: 30 Jun 2009 07:32 PM PDT

macbook_stop_jailbreak

Right in time for iPhone 3.1, the iPhone Dev-Team has begun issuing their usual warnings about jailbreak/unlock users and new firmware updates:

ultrasn0w users must stay away from official 3.1 (incl. betas) until we release the tools for it, or you’ll lose unlock!

Tempting as a tasty new beta may be, if you can’t live without your hacked iPhone, don’t hit that update button now, or any time before the iPhone Dev-Team has new, tested tools ready for you.

Once again, you’ve been warned!

[Via Twitter]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

iPhone Dev-Team: ultrasn0w Users Avoid iPhone 3.1 Beta!


iPhone 3.1: Non-Destructive Video Editing, Bluetooth Voice Control, Vibrating Icon Moves, and More!

Posted: 30 Jun 2009 06:26 PM PDT

iPhone 3.1: Video Editing: Save As...

Early word from TiPb commenters and the Twitter show some new iPhone 3.1 features found already:

  • Non-destructive video editing means trimming a clip no longer saves over the original video but gives you the option to “Save as copy…”
  • Voice Control now works over Bluetooth
  • iPhone vibrates when moving icons
  • Updated AT&T profile to 4.2
  • Updated modem firmware to 5.08.01

Behind the scenes changes abound as well:

  • Improvements to OpenGL and Quartz.
  • APIs to allow third party apps to access videos and edit them.

Update: Yes, MMS buttons appear to be back for AT&T users, but as with early iphone 3.0 Betas, they’re non-functional on standard devices. Whether they survive to the official release this time (they were removed in 3.0 Beta 5), who knows?

[Thanks to Chris, Muero and WhenWillApple]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

iPhone 3.1: Non-Destructive Video Editing, Bluetooth Voice Control, Vibrating Icon Moves, and More!


Quick App: Cellar Wine Tracker for iPhone

Posted: 30 Jun 2009 05:20 PM PDT

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From the team team that brought us Barista, Cellar aims to give wine the same app love coffee has enjoyed for a while now:

Cellar is a portable, swipeable showcase of what’s currently in your cellar or wine rack, plus the Garage feature lets you store wine that you’ve decided you might buy again.

Cellar has been submitted to the App Store and should be available… as soon as Apple decides to make it so.

In the meantime, enjoy the screenshots after the break!

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

Quick App: Cellar Wine Tracker for iPhone


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