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Tuesday, March 16, 2010

KaleidoVid Is a Fun Video Kaleidoscope For the iPhone

From Gizmodo -

KaleidoVid is, as its name implies, a $0.99 kaleidoscope app for the iPhone. Once installed, you hold your iPhone up to anything, just like a camera, and the app will take what the image in the camera and turn it kaleidoscopy. Tap the screen to freeze the thing and save it to your photos, or immediately tweet/Facebook it.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Simple iPhone 3GS Tips & Tricks

ABCD Said - PixieTea Use iPhone MakeMusic

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Voice Band - Taylor Swift's You Belong with Me



Monday, February 15, 2010

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Fresh iPhone/iPad SDK Seeded To Developers

From Gizmodo -

iPhone SDK 3.2, which includes a full suite of iPad dev tools, has been updated to Beta 2 with several bugs being fixed. In addition, the testing bug with apps created in SDK 3.2 and running on iPhone 3.1.3 has also been fixed.

Unfortunately, as with previous versions of the iPhone SDK, an NDA with Apple which explicitly prohibits  showing off iPad apps, major aspects of the SDK, simulator and tools to the public.is required. So, at least for now, don't expect any screenshots of iPad apps. At least not yet.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Parental Control glitch gives kids access to App Store porn


From Ars Technica -

A side effect of Apple's move to have apps rated by age level meant that apps with racier content—essentially soft-core porn—could be approved for sale if was rated 17+. Educator and developer Fraser Speirs has discovered, however, that access is only restricted for purchasing, not browsing in the App Store, which is a real problem in school environments. The glitch has become a huge headache for Speirs' school, which plans to roll out iPod touches to every one of its 100 students next fall.

The problem that Speirs identified is that even though Parental Controls will limit app purchases for restricted apps, it does nothing to restrict browsing restricted apps via iTunes. Just accessing the "Lifestyle" category, for instance, will list dozens of "Amateur Swimsuit" apps, as well as "A Hidden Cam Thong." iTunes will happily display the product page and screenshots for apps such as "Movie of Sexy Japanese Girl," "Amateur Sohot Queens," or "Epic Boobs," replete with graphic text descriptions and NSFW—or school—screenshots.

The problem also affects the App Store app on the iPhone as well, though it does go one step further than iTunes in keeping the content protected. It will still display a restricted app's description and icon, but it won't show any screenshots.