Patent suggests location-based social networking for iPhone

Posted on February 6, 2010 by Chris Rawson.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Filed under: ,

Imagine you and a friend are on a phone call, and both of you own iPhones. You're trying to meet up somewhere downtown in a city neither of you know very well, so the best answer you can give your friend when he asks, "Where are you now?" is "Uhhh..." followed by several seconds of silence. It's already possible to share your location using the Maps app on the iPhone -- find your current location, tap on the blue marker on the map, tap "Share Location," and then send it to your friend either as an e-mail or MMS. Then your friend receives the e-mail or MMS with your location, opens it in Maps, and has the option of finding directions to your location from his current location.

If that sounds like a lot of unnecessarily complex steps to answer the simple question of "Where are you," you're in luck, because according to a new patent application, Apple agrees with you. By putting "Request location info" and "Release location info" buttons on the call screen in the Phone app, it would be possible to share your location or request someone else's with a single button press. The same process applies -- the iPhone polls its GPS to find out where you are, then transmits that info to your friend's iPhone -- but instead of having to jump through all the hoops yourself, the OS handles it for you in the background. Once your phone receives a request for location info it comes up in a notification, probably very similar to the notifications location-based apps already use when they request permission to use location data. If you agree to release your location data to the caller, it's transmitted in a fully encrypted signal to the caller's iPhone. Your location data would then show up on your friend's iPhone, complete with the option to find directions.

Continue reading Patent suggests location-based social networking for iPhone

Patent suggests location-based social networking for iPhone originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Sun, 07 Feb 2010 02:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)Patent suggests location-based social networking for iPhone originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Sun, 07 Feb 2010 02:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TiPb Give Away: 4 FREE Copies of Qik VideoCamera for iPhone!

Posted on by Georgia.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Qik screen

Qik VideoCamera [$1.99 - iTunes link] has gotten an update and to celebrate they’re giving away four (4) FREE copies to TiPb readers!

For a quick look at the Qik VideoCamera update — and the give-away — follow along after the break!

If you haven’t yet, check out my first Qik VideoCamera review because we’re only going to focus on the updates here. Finished? Good!

Qik VideoCamera can now be used on 2G, 3G and 3GS. Plus this amazing video application has gotten even more useful — and fun. Qik VideoCamera added new on-screen functions, so it is much easier to choose your effects and enlarge, brighten or increase audio of your videos. This mean you can alter things in real time, with the camera rolling.

You can also now post your videos to facebook, SMS videos to your friends and they’ve added 5 more effects

Sepia

Qik sepia

Area Zoom

Qik enlarge

Twirl

(I feel it is more of a fun house mirror.)

Qik fun mirror

X-ray

Qik x ray

Wiper

(My favorite — there is fog on screen and your touch wipes it away!)

qik wiper

Give-away

And now the give away! If you want a FREE copy, just head on over to Twitter and tweet us this shoutout:

“Hey @TiPb, love the new @Qik VideoCamera! Can has? http://bit.ly/bH9eoy”

One entry per tweep. The contest starts now and ends Wednesday, February 10th at 12pm PT. And remember, promo codes require a US iTunes App Store account (Apple’s rule, not ours!) Good luck!

TiPb Give Away: 4 FREE Copies of Qik VideoCamera for iPhone! is a story by TiPb. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

TiPb - The #1 iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch Blog


On Flash Crash and Sublime HTML5 Video

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Smashing Flash Rumors

We all know by now there’s no Flash on the iPhone or iPod touch, and it doesn’t look like there’ll be Flash on the iPad, which is probably why Adobe’s Chief Technology Officer fired off an impassioned defense of the plugin, while a software engineer shows how a still-unfixed bug crashes it, and the first full on HTML5 video player concept makes its debut.

First up, Adobe CTO, Kevin Lynch has posted a full throated defense of Flash on his Adobe Blog and in a follow up comment notes:

Regarding crashing, I can tell you that we don’t ship Flash with any known crash bugs, and if there was such a widespread problem historically Flash could not have achieved its wide use today.

How does this reconcile with Apple CEO, Steve Jobs saying something along the lines of “Whenever a Mac crashes more often than not it’s because of Flash“? TUAW draws our attention to Matthew Dempsky who found a bug that causes Flash to crash in Safari and Chrome, and Firefox to crash completely. And Adobe hasn’t fixed it some 16 months later… Dempsky has created http://flashcrash.dempsky.org/ to demonstrate (remember, it will crash Firefox completely!), and says:

This page exploits a bug that I reported to Adobe in September 2008, and has affected every release of Flash on every platform since then. Despite numerous email exchanges with the Flash product manager about the bug, the bug report being hidden from the public for “security” reasons, and [although] Adobe CTO Kevin Lynch’s claims otherwise, it continues to be an issue. [...] I’m just a software engineer who at one time had to deal with Adobe’s sorry excuse for a development platform and made an earnest effort on several occasions at helping them improve it for everyone. (This issue is merely the tip of the iceberg of ridiculous bugs and random backwards and forwards incompatibilities known as Adobe’s Flash Player plug-in.)

TUAW makes the case that Adobe’s been resting on their de facto-standard laurels. Daring Fireball, meanwhile links to SublimeVideo, the first (to our knowledge) full on HTML5 and JavaScript alternative video player. It’s still early days, of course, but it works without a plugin, doesn’t buffer until you tell it to, and lets you jump to any point in the video with fairly robust controls — and more to come.

Lynch, and former Macromedia Flash MX co-creator, Jeremy Allaire on TechCrunch, make valid points that HTML5 can’t replace Flash and that Adobe works really hard on both.

In an ideal world, however, perhaps HTML5 can relieve Flash of some of the duties for which it’s unsuited, give us back a lighter, cleaner, faster web overall, and let Flash and Adobe concentrate on those tasks for which there is no Flash alternative — complex data visualizations, for example.

(And we’d also appreciate it if Flash stopped allowing websites to abuse local settings by storing “cookies” on our system — okay Adobe?)

[Via TUAW, <a href="Daring Fireball">Daring Fireball]

On Flash Crash and Sublime HTML5 Video is a story by TiPb. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

TiPb - The #1 iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch Blog


New Password Breaker Tool Claims to Break Into Password Protected iPhone Backups

Posted on by Andy.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Make Your Own (Paper) iPad and iPad Sighting at NYC Starbucks

While the iPad was officially announced in January, the iPad will not be available for purchase until late March. However, it seems some iPads have been seeded into the wild as David Vogler claims to have seen one in a New York City Starbucks (phot...

iPad Sighting at NYC Starbucks and Make Your Own (Paper) iPad

While the iPad was officially announced in January, the iPad will not be available for purchase until late March. However, it seems some iPads have been seeded into the wild as David Vogler claims to have seen one in a New York City Starbucks (phot...

iPad in Business — Doctors Want it, Omni Group Gets it

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Steve Jobs with iPad on Chair

While much of iPad presentation thus far has been focused on content consumption, Apple’s iWork demo and the ability to run iPhone productivity apps — and eventually iPad-specific apps — as well as 1024×768 web apps means it’s got a fighting chance in business, especially key verticals like medicine, and with developers like Omni Group.

First up, 9to5mac reports that in a survey by medical lynch-pin Epocrates [Free - iTunes link], up to 60% of doctors were at least considering an iPad:

  • 9 percent want it now
  • 13 percent want it this year
  • 38 percent were interested and wanted more info

Next, Mac developer Omni Group, which has dipped a toe into iPhone development with Omni Focus [$19.99 - iTunes link], has decided to port than entire portfolio of apps — OmniGraffle, OmniOutliner, OmniPlan, OmniFocus, and OmniGraphSketcher — to iPad even if it delays development of the Mac versions:

Remember how Macintosh was intended to be the computer “for the rest of us“? That’s what we feel Apple’s iPad is: the best computing device for most of the things people use computers for. (Or, as Apple puts it, “the best way to experience the web, email, and photos.”) It’s the computer people can sit down and start using immediately, without training, whether they’re 2 or 92.

Having seen many workers struggle with inelegant interfaces and fidget with poorly conceived controls, the idea of a great app on a 9.7″ multitouch screen will no doubt be highly appealing to some. An app that could work across iPhone, iPad, and desktop could also allow for quick reference when on the go, easy exploration when on site, and powerful organization and reporting when back at the desk. Sound appealing to you?

iPad in Business — Doctors Want it, Omni Group Gets it is a story by TiPb. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

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Review: Castle Frenzy for iPhone

Posted on by Tim Mercer.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Sporting 3D graphics, great animations and numerous ways to dispatch the ensuing hordes, Castle Frenzy is a beautiful and addictive title.

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Adobe CTO Responds to Apple: “We Don’t Ship Flash With Any Known Crash Bugs”

Posted on by Andy.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Game Developers Like iPhone More than Nintendo DS, Sony PSP

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

iphone_gaming

According to Game Developers Research, their new study shows the iPhone platform is more popular with game developers than either the Nintendo DS or Sony PSP. Electronista sums up:

Demand for the iPhone has surged to where about 19 percent of all game developers are writing for the iPhone and iPod touch. The figure is more than twice as high as for the DS and PSP and results in three quarters of all mobile game developers writing for Apple’s handhelds.

While no reasons were cited for the level of developer interest in the iPhone and iPod touch, they figure the high visibility of the Apple brand combined with robust developer tools and centralized App Store model makes for a compelling package. 75 million devices on the market probably doesn’t hurt either…

Good news for iPhone, iPod touch, and eventually iPad gamers — with developers come great games.

Game Developers Like iPhone More than Nintendo DS, Sony PSP is a story by TiPb. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

TiPb - The #1 iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch Blog


Verizon Takes a Dig at AT&T Once More With New Ad Campaign

Posted on by Andy.
Categories: Uncategorized.