Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Opena iPhone 4 case - Opens Bottles - Corona Time

The awesomeness you see above is an iPhone 4 case dubbed the Opena. It is the result of the work by Melbourne, Australia-based industrial designer Chris Peters and Rob Ward, a former Toolmaker.   The pitch?

 "The idea for The Opena came to us one afternoon when we were out having some beers. Some people have bottle openers on their keyrings, but many times you don’t always have your keys with you. But what is always with you? Your phone!"

The injection-moulded case is machined from solid blocks of ABS plastic while the bottle opener part is stamped out of food-grade stainless steel. The final production-spec Opena case will have a fine satin textured surface finish. They are raising $15,000 on Kickstarter to complete the project – it’s costly due to the tooling and 3D CAD technology involved. You can secure yourself one the first Openas for just fifteen bucks. We just hope opening bottles with this thing won’t scratch or break the iPhone 4′s glass back.



Tuesday, June 7, 2011

17 popular apps Steve Jobs just killed



Yesterday, just in case you were not online, was Apple’s annual WWDC event. The enhancements Apple made to iOS, Mac OS, and the entire Apple ecosystem were revolutionary. 


The following is a list of app categories, represented by one example, that will surely suffer from the new and integrated features in iOS 5.

1: Boxcar (Notification Apps)
2: Dropbox (Cloud syncing apps)
3: WhatsApp/Kik (Free messaging apps)
4: QuickPix (Camera- enhancing apps)
5: Instapaper (Read later apps)
6: Twitpic (not an app)
7: Remember the Milk (Reminder apps)
8: Photoshop Express (Photo Editing apps)
9: Echofon/Tweetdeck (Twitter apps)
10: Instagram (Photo Sharing apps)
11: Pulse (Reader apps):
12: iChromy (Browsers)
13: Wifi Photo (Wifi syncing apps)
14: Dictionary (Translation apps)
15: Gmail (Web app)
16: Find my iPhone
17: iTunes: “For the first time ever, you can now own an iOS device, without a computer. No more need for iTunes and all that wasted syncing time. You can set up the device wirelessly, back up your files wirelessly, and sync your device wirelessly. This is huge. I have two words for you, Apple. Good riddance. And here are some more words I have been waiting to say for a long time. Bye bye iTunes, hello wireless syncing. I don’t know you yet but I think I love you!”

Friday, June 3, 2011

iCloud will it be free or will it be $25/year


Nobody knows for sure what Apple has in store Monday when it introduces, iCloud, the company's newest cloud service offering. Will iCloud absorb MobileMe--Apple's calendar, e-mail, and contacts sync service -- or will it stand alone? Does Apple have plans for a new file sync feature that will seamlessly unify files on your iOS devices with your Mac or Windows PC?

Several pictures taken outside of Moscone West, where WWDC will be held, capture banners bearing the word "iCloud" together with an icon and a huge banner depicts Mac OS X Lion, iOS 5, and iCloud as being the three components adding up for WWDC 2011. Additional banners hung from the ceiling are still under wraps. In previous years, Apple has kept some of these banners under wraps until the Keynote presentation."


Tuesday, May 31, 2011

iWork now available for iPhone, iPod Touch






In addition to the iCloud announcement, Apple® today announced that its groundbreaking iWork® productivity apps, Keynote®, Pages® and Numbers®, are now available for iPhone® and iPod touch®, as well as iPad®. Created for the Mac® and then completely redesigned for iOS and Apple’s revolutionary Multi-Touch™ interface, Keynote, Pages and Numbers allow you to create and share stunning presentations, beautifully formatted documents and powerful spreadsheets on the go. iWork apps are available on the App Store™ for $9.99 each to new users and as a free update for existing iWork for iPad customers.

“Now you can use Keynote, Pages and Numbers on iPhone and iPod touch to create amazing presentations, documents and spreadsheets right in the palm of your hand,” said Philip Schiller, Apple’s senior vice president of Worldwide Product Marketing. “The incredible Retina display, revolutionary Multi-Touch interface and our powerful software make it easy to create, edit, organize and share all of your documents from iPhone 4 or iPod touch.”



Keynote, Pages and Numbers import and export documents from iWork for Mac and Microsoft Office; print wirelessly using AirPrint™; and include beautiful Apple-designed themes and templates. All iWork apps now include improved document management with thumbnail images that let you find your files quickly, organize them and group them into folders using intuitive gestures. From the Tools button in the toolbar, you can easily share any presentation, document or spreadsheet without leaving the app.

Keynote makes it easy to create impressive presentations, complete with animated charts and transitions. You can play your presentation in Full Screen view on the stunning, high-resolution Retina™ display or connect to a projector or HDTV for a large audience. Available separately, the Keynote Remote app allows your iPhone or iPod touch to control a Keynote presentation on any iOS device or Mac.
Pages is the most beautiful word processor ever designed for a mobile device and has everything you need to create amazing documents. Pages takes full advantage of the high-resolution Retina display on iPhone 4 and iPod touch so you can see all the detail and richness of your documents. To make working with text easy on iPhone and iPod touch, Smart Zoom automatically zooms in to follow the cursor while you’re editing and zooms back out when you’re done.

Numbers uses Multi-Touch gestures and an intelligent keyboard to help you create compelling, great-looking spreadsheets with over 250 easy-to-use functions, flexible tables and eye-catching charts. Just like Pages, Numbers takes advantage of the high-resolution Retina display and Smart Zoom to make working with text and cells on iPhone 4 or iPod touch easy.


Click Here!



Thursday, May 26, 2011

iSync is missing in Lion



The iSync application lets you automatically transfer information from iCal calendars and Address Book contacts on a Mac to your third-party mobile device.  For example, your third-party mobile phone device can be synchronized using iSync to display your latest events, and your contact list can always be up-to-date with your Mac.
Lion users are saying that iSync is nowhere to be found in Apple's next OS, along with FrontRow, Java runtime and Rosetta. 
From Mobileme to iCloud ...


Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Sparrow - The new gmail for Mac





Sparrow now supports General IMAP - Google Mail, Mobile Me, Yahoo, AOL and any custom IMAP account. Sparrow is a minimalist mail application designed to keep things simple and efficient. Nothing fancy just your email and nothing else.






  • Full IMAP support - Sparrow now supports all IMAP accounts, including: Gmail, Mobile Me, Yahoo, and custom IMAP.
  • Multiple accounts - Plug as many accounts as you want in Sparrow and seamlessly switch from one to the other.
  • Conversations - Quickly flick through threaded mail conversations like never before.
  • Labels - Create and edit Labels straight from within Sparrow. Easily keep a clean and tidy inbox.
  • Quick replies - Replying your mail has never been so simple. Click, write and send in the same window.
  • Formatting bar - Sparrow makes it easy to change font styles, format lists, and more.
  • Inline attachments - Drag & drop images and documents straight into your mail.
  • Notifications - Stay up to date with your mail stream on selected accounts
  • Menu bar notifications - Always keep an eye on your inbox.



Friday, May 20, 2011

Your machine has been infected with viruses that only a "MacDefender" app can remove. "Only" is the key word.

First Off:

You can limit your exposure to these kinds of scams and malware. The malware targets Safari, so follow these steps to protect your Mac:

1 - Launch Safari.
2 - Select Preferences > General from the Safari menu.
3 - Uncheck the "Open 'safe' files after downloading" box found in the area I've outlined in red below:

What a MacDefender attack looks like


MacDefender attacks your Mac from any site on which a hacker has installed a custom JavaScript. Visiting a web page that you believe is benign runs a JavaScript that redirects you to a malicious website. These sites are changing from day to day, so it's virtually impossible to block them.
Once your browser has been directed to the malevolent site, you'll see a page very similar to the one seen at the top of this post. It's telling you that your Mac is infected with viruses. As mentioned earlier, hackers are already changing the look of the malicious websites, so don't expect the page to look exactly like this.
Usually, just visiting the bad website downloads a file to your hard drive. That file is generally named something like BestMacAntivirus2011.mpkg.zip or anti-malware.zip, but the name may be different. Keep an eye on your downloads folder and keep it clean so that any new downloads that cause the folder to "bounce" will catch your attention, and you may catch that the malware file has been downloaded. It has an extension of .mpkg and a name of MacDefender, MacSecurity, or MacProtector. If you see this file in your downloads folder, put it into the Trash, empty the Trash, and you've just saved your Mac from the malware.
If your Mac is set up to automatically open "safe" files, you still have a chance to keep MacDefender off your machine. In this case, the file is unzipped and the installer package (a file with an .mpkg extension) launches. You're going to see a standard installer window that looks something like this:



Go Back and Delete...