Shenzhen Worker Commits Suicide over Missing iPhone Prototype - Foxconn Investigating, Apple Comments

Posted on July 22, 2009 by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

apple-iphone-3gs-prototype

As has been widely covered on the net, Foxconn worker Sun Danyong of Shenzhen, responsible for 16 fourth-generation iPhone prototypes, committed suicide on July 16, after reporting one of the prototypes missing three days earlier.

Foxconn is the Taiwanese company that has long manufactured Apple iPods and the iPhone. Colleagues informed the Chinese media that Sun notified them over internet chat that he was confined, abused during interrogation, and had his property searched. Foxconn chief of security, Gu Qinming, who refutes the allegations, has been suspended.

Apple released the following statement to CNet:

“We are saddened by the tragic loss of this young employee, and we are awaiting results of the investigations into his death. We require our suppliers to treat all workers with dignity and respect.”

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

Shenzhen Worker Commits Suicide over Missing iPhone Prototype - Foxconn Investigating, Apple Comments


iPhone Pro Tips: Find Text in Safari with Javascript Bookmarklet

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Find... in page javascript bookmarklet

If you’re browsing the web on a PC, you can just hit CTRL-F or CMD-F and quickly find any text on a webpage. It’s great for finding things fast, especially on long reams of text, and Safari does a nice job of it — just not Mobile Safari on the iPhone, not yet.

Editor emeritus Mike Overbo brought something very similar to us two years ago (along with a ton of others — check that link!) when iPhone 1.x made bookmarklets all the rage. Since then, Apple has added a lot of functionality, but still hasn’t deigned to gift us with Find… on page. Rafael Cimatti (via App Advice) is keeping the handy Javascript bookmarklet alive via Cydia (though it works on any iPhone). It can’t fully replace a built in command, with next, back, etc. options, etc. but if it isn’t 100% right, it is 100% “right now”.

Here’s the bookmarklet: Find…

Either bookmark it on your desktop browser (drag it to the bookmark bar on desktop Safari) and sync it over, or on your iPhone copy the code after the break, bookmark a random page, edit it, change the name, and paste in the code (check the App Advice link above for step by step instructions).

And next time you’re on a page, hit the bookmark, type in your text, and find away!

Have an iPhone Pro Tip of you own to share? Send it in!

[via Daveizzle]

javascript:void%28s%3Dprompt%28%27Find%20text%3A%27%2C%27%27%29%29%3Bs%3D%27%28%27+s+%27%29%27%3Bx%3Dnew%20RegExp%28s%2C%27gi%27%29%3Brn%3DMath.floor%28Math.random%28%29*100%29%3Brid%3D%27z%27%20+%20rn%3Bb%20%3D%20document.body.innerHTML%3Bb%3Db.replace%28x%2C%27%3Cspan%20name%3D%27%20+%20rid%20+%20%27%20id%3D%27%20+%20rid%20+%20%27%20style%3D%5C%27color%3A%23000%3Bbackground-color%3Ayellow%3B%20font-weight%3Abold%3B%5C%27%3E%241%3C/span%3E%27%29%3Bvoid%28document.body.innerHTML%3Db%29%3Balert%28%27Found%20%27%20+%20document.getElementsByName%28rid%29.length%20+%20%27%20matches.%27%29%3Bwindow.scrollTo%280%2Cdocument.getElementsByName%28rid%29%5B0%5D.offsetTop%29%3B

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

iPhone Pro Tips: Find Text in Safari with Javascript Bookmarklet


iPhone developers: 360 | iDev Conference TUAW reader discount

Posted on by Steven Sande.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Filed under: , , , , ,

iPhone developers who weren't able to make it to this year's WWDC are in luck -- the 360 | iDev Conference is planned for September 27 - 30, 2009 at the Curtis Hotel in downtown Denver, Colorado.

The conference is being organized by 360 | Conferences, the team that presented the highly successful 360 | iDev conference in San Jose, CA earlier this year. There's a half-day hands-on advanced debugging session planned for Sunday, September 27th, followed by three full days of sessions by notable speakers such as master iPhone developer Bill Dudney, Phil Libin (CEO of Evernote), and David Barnard of AppCubby.

Conference registration is limited to 400 or so individuals, so if you're planning on attending, it's time to get moving. 360 | Conferences provided TUAW with a special code that you can use to get a 20% discount on registration. Just enter the code phrase TUAWiDevDiscount (case-sensitive) when you register for the conference to receive your discount. They've also provide a discount code (TUAWInMoDiscount) for the InsideMobile Conference planned for this upcoming weekend in San Jose.

With the iPhone app world still showing an amazing amount of growth, this may be the perfect time to build or strengthen your iPhone development skills.

iPhone developers: 360 | iDev Conference TUAW reader discount originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 22 Jul 2009 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)iPhone developers: 360 | iDev Conference TUAW reader discount originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 22 Jul 2009 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Navigon launches MobileNavigator for iPhone, for North America

Posted on by Peter Cohen.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Navigon has released its navigation software for the iPhone for North America, for $70.

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Opinion: Living on the EDGE

Posted on by Rob Griffiths.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Rob Griffiths discusses the impact that network speed, or lack thereof, has on the iPhone user experience.

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Browser Wars: Opera Mobile Brings Back “Turbo” Boost to Compete with Safari

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Turbo Boost

No word yet on whether you get a pocket Hasselhoff to push it for you, but it sounds like Opera Mobile 9.7 is set to bring back the “Turbo” boost in an effort to take it to Mobile Safari (and, we presume, WebKit in general as found on the iPhone, Google Chrome lite for Android, Palm Pre, some Nokia devices, etc. etc…. etc…)

Ganging up on the “real internet” browser are our good friends Matt Miller from NokiaExperts.com and Phil Nickinson from WMExperts.com. Matt explains the concept behind Nokia’s blast from the past via his ZDNet blog:

Turbo mode that supplements the native Opera Mobile browser with the proxy functionality found in Opera Mini. So, with Opera Mobile 9.7 and Turbo mode enabled you get a fully functioning web browser with proxy/server side lifting going on to provide the FASTEST browsing experience currently available on a mobile phone.

TiPb vaguely remembers proxy and cache tricks from those old spamvertisements promising to quadruple our old dial-up modem speeds. Phil tries to pip us to the proxy post, however:

OK, this isn’t exactly a fair fight, but forget about that for a minute. To the average user it probably doesn’t matter whether your browser is being rendered through a proxy, security and privacy implications be damned.

And he’s absolutely right. When those users are stuck on the equivalent of dial-up. Once they — like iPhone, Android, and Palm Pre users — get with the equivalent of broadband, well… let’s just say we don’t get those spamvertisements anymore…

Holding the snark for a moment, it’s great to see Opera providing stop gaps for users with slow connections who don’t care about privacy or security. Here’s hoping the gap stops being necessary to fill quickly, however, and Opera can focus on forward-looking browser technologies, since WebKit doesn’t look to be slowing down any time soon.

[Tip o'the browser to Phil for the image inspiration as well!]

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

Browser Wars: Opera Mobile Brings Back “Turbo” Boost to Compete with Safari


The Competition: Hands on with the BlackBerry 9550 Storm 2 “Odin”

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

BlackBerry Storm 2 in Action

CrackBerry.com’s Kevin got his hands (and signature green coffee table) on RIM’s next-generation touchscreen BlackBerry, the Storm 2, aka 9550, aka “Odin”. And his early thoughts?

  • the hardware is much nicer
  • the click screen is more user-friendly
  • the operating system is basically the same

Is 2/3 enough? Says Kevin:

In going hands-on with the 9550, it becomes clear that this next-generation Storm is really an evolution of the original Storm. Yes, it’s better in every respect, but I’m getting the impression it’s sort of like when a new model year of a car comes out - it doesn’t make the old one instantly obsolete.

TiPb was pretty tough on the original Storm, though so were many BlackBerry faithful (it was basically cast as the Vista of Smartphones, after all). Any chance the Storm 2 will turn the touchscreen form factor around for RIM? Anyone see it as a threat to the iPhone 3GS and iPhone 3.0? Or is it still about RIM providing that diversity to people who want the BlackBerry experience, and would never consider another device, touchscreen or no touchscreen? And if it disappoints, will RIM still lay the blame on consumer expectations in a post-iPhone world?

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

The Competition: Hands on with the BlackBerry 9550 Storm 2 “Odin”


Review: Streetball for iPhone

Posted on by Tim Mercer.
Categories: Uncategorized.
There's room for improvement with Streetball, particularly when it comes to adding new features. But this basketball game offers fun for hoops fanatics.

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