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- iPad Live, tonight at 9pm EDT. Be there!
- The week in iPad
- Dropbox updates ToS: What you need to know
- iPhone 4: One year later
- iPhone reunites mother and daughter after five years apart
iPad Live, tonight at 9pm EDT. Be there! Posted: 03 Jul 2011 02:49 PM PDT
Come with us if you want to iPad Live. Time: 9pm ET, 6pm PT, 2am BST.Place: Right here on the home page!If you have any questions or topics you’d like us to discuss, just leave them in the comments then come be part of the show! (And yes, you can watch from iPhone via Ustream Viewer app (here’s how) and iPad (we recommend Duet Browser.) Chat with you soon! |
Posted: 03 Jul 2011 10:27 AM PDT Missed a compelling piece of iPad news, a great review, or a killer how-to? We’re not collecting absolutely everything in iPad here — you can hit up TiPb.com/iPad for that! — but we’re carefully picking what we think is the best of the last 7 days and presenting it here for your review. And hey! — these double as show notes for our iPad Live! podcast tonight at 9pm Eastern. So join us at TiPb.com/live and follow along! MetaiPad 3
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Dropbox updates ToS: What you need to know Posted: 03 Jul 2011 10:03 AM PDT Dropbox, the popular online file storage and sharing service used by many iOS apps, has updated their terms of service, ostensibly to make their policies “easier to read and understand, and better reflect product improvements”. This after controversies involving how they handled encryption, who could and couldn’t look at your files, and an incident when passwords were disabled for a very short period of time and anyone could, theoretically peek inside. They’ve put up a blog post to help explain the new ToS and the reasons behind them, and are updating it as they get users’ feedback. Some key points:
This is legal ass-covering. Dropbox is hugely popular among iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad users, primarily because it’s easy to use and they provided really robust APIs that developers could use to get around Apple’s up-until-now p!$$-pour file sharing abilities. A large amount of iOS users use Dropbox and a large amount of Dropbox users use iOS. To enable that sharing, they feel they need to “own” the files so they can avoid being sued if anything unforeseen happens (probably including legal demands.) So, if they use your files, it’s not their fault. If you misuse their system, by contrast, it’s all your fault. They’re not taking the fall for any illegal material you choose to store there.
The important thing to remember is this: don’t consider anything you put on an internet connected device to be private. Ever. Some of it will be better protected than others. Some of it will be far less of a target than others. But anything stored can be accessed, by accident or by malicious interception. (Just ask any young star in Hollywood with a camera phone and lack of discretion, unfortunately.) Security and convenience are always in contention and online services like DropBox fall heavily on the convenience side. Read the whole blog post below and let Dropbox — and us — know what you think. Will any of this change your Dropbox usage? Will iCloud? UPDATE: 1Password has a great blog post up about the Dropbox changes as well. [1Password] |
Posted: 03 Jul 2011 06:39 AM PDT Just over one year ago, Apple launched iPhone 4. Typically that would mean a newer, shinier iPhone would have taken its place by now, and it’d be that iPhone we’d be talking about. But not this year. This year there won’t be a new iPhone — an iPhone 5 — until fall, and that means iPhone 4 is still, one year later, the flagship iPhone on the market. We’ve reviewed the original AT&T/GSM iPhone 4, we’ve reviewed the Verizon/CDMA iPhone 4. We’ve even reviewed the flipping white iPhone 4. We looked at iPhone 4 after 3 months on the market and we’ve written post after post about it, day after day, over the course of the last year. So how does it stack up? Is the A4 still a good chipset? Is the Retina Display still the best screen in the business? Is the industrial design and fit and finish still above and beyond all other contenders? Is it still on of the best phones on the market? We put the question to the staff here at TiPb and the greater Smartphone Experts Network, and here’s what they had to say.
Georgia
Does Apple have to release the iPhone 5 soon? Probably not. But they will, because if you are not the ones pushing the envelope you will end up being the one licking it. Cody Allison
With iPhone 5 just around the corner, I am very interested to see what direction Apple will take with it. George Lim
I'm extremely happy with the iPhone 4, and with iOS 5 just around the corner, its going to get even better. Unless the iPhone 5, completely blows me away (which it will), I'll happily stick with my iPhone 4. Matt Miller, Nokia Experts
Most of why I used other devices (notifications, OTA updates, etc.) are nearly all addressed in iOS 5 and Apple may be able to satisfy people with just an update. Then again, we now expect a new iPhone every year so let’s see what Apple has in the iPhone 5. Ally Kazmucha
I also think my iPhone 4 has held up better than any of my other iPhones, with or without a case. At first I was nervous about the front and back being glass but I haven’t had any issues. I did, however, have to have my iPhone 4 swapped twice for a faulty sleep/wake button. Not sure if this says anything about build quality or I just had bad luck twice. Either way – I think the iPhone 4 is still topping the smartphone market for a reason. Most smartphones being released now are still contenders to the iPhone 4. RIM still hasn’t caught up and Android is still an extremely fragmented platform. While I’m excited to see what the 5th hardware iteration will bring with it, I’m perfectly content with my iPhone 4 until then. Leanna Lofte
Keith Newman, PreCentral.net
Why so negative? Actually I’m not… those are just facts. The other facts are it is still one of the sexiest devices I have ever held and used. In the land of black slabs (and technically, this device is one), it’s the metallic curve of the iPhone 4 that sticks out the most. The machine cut buttons… the double sided glass panels… hell, even the bottom speaker grill and screw assembly looks slick. Which is why I am worried the next iteration of the iPhone will have a hard time topping the 4 series. The technology will be there… the A5 (or maybe even the rumored A6) chip, more RAM, a better GPU perhaps and thus the burden of a one year old device trying to be cutting edge will be relieved. (It’s a shame since the iPhone 4 got hurt with product cycles this time around, it’s now the kid on the block that’s got to keep it all together for an extended period.) But I don’t think from anything rumored to this point will be able to beat out the pure svelte that is the iPhone 4 design. Phil Nickinson, Android Central
Consider this: No one can deny that the Motorola Droid was a wildly popular phone when it launched in late 2009. The Droid 2 launched in fall 2010 with little fanfare, and only a minor spec bump. The Droid 3 is on its way, but will it suffer the same fate? That’s the difference between Apple and, well, just about everybody else. Controlling the hardware, software and, maybe more important, the message — Apple’s able to release devices on its terms, just like it always has. Whether apple releases the iPhone 5 this summer or fall is moot. It will be met with the same fervor whether it’s released in two weeks, two months, or sometime next year. And the longer it takes, the more the excitement grows. Chris Oldoryd
When I get asked by friends if they should wait for the next iPhone before buying, it is no longer an easy question to answer. Before the iPhone 4 was released the 3GS was ready to be upgraded. The iPhone 4 however is still a current top of the range phone. I would still recommend it above any other handset available right now. Apple will have to give us something very special with iPhone 5 to outshine this beautiful iPhone 4! Will I upgrade? Of course. Do I have to upgrade? No. Chris Parsons, CrackBerry.com
Rene Ritchie
Don’t underestimate the power of regular major software updates rolled out — on the same day — to all on-market devices. iOS 4 made a lot of iPhone 3GS users happy last year and iOS 5 on an iPhone 4 will once again make users locked into a contract or looking for a cheaper option feel like they have a brand new phone anyway. Okay. A software update can’t give iPhone 4 an LTE radio or 3D display or dual core processors or a kickstand. But it doesn’t need to. Perceptively, iPhone 4, one year later, is absolutely still competitive with the latest and greatest competitive devices on the market, and while it’s missing some specific features, it’s still best in class at others. If you want a phone works for you rather than you having to work for it, iPhone is still your go-to device. But here’s the thing — nothing lasts forever and mobile has never been more competitive. iPhone 5 needs to come, and it needs to come soon enough and be impact-ful enough to keep up Apple’s hardware momentum. You?Your turn! What do you think about iPhone 4 one year later? And how much pressure do you think Apple should be feeling to release iPhone 5? |
iPhone reunites mother and daughter after five years apart Posted: 03 Jul 2011 06:28 AM PDT A mother, who lost touch with her daughter, was able to find her again 5 years later thanks to a kind hearted iPhone user. The mother, a shoe cleaner in China, came across someone in the street with an iPad and asked if she could use it to get online to help find her daughter. Unfortunately the iPad was WiFi only and there was no network to be found. Luckily, the iPad user also had an iPhone. A photo was taken of the woman and it was posted to Weibo, a hugely popular Twitter-like site in China with over 140 million users. The picture was reposted (re-weibo’d?) over 100,000 times and within three days her daughter had seen the photograph and the pair were in touch again! Earlier in the week we heard about the visually impaired schoolgirl using an iPad to improve her school life. That is two uplifting stories involving iOS devices this week. May be Steve was right; these devices are magical after all? [The Loop] |
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