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Category: iOS (page 35 of 35)

Push Gmail for iPhone and Windows Mobile: Not Pushy Enough

sync A few weeks back, Google unveiled the long-awaited push Gmail for iPhone and Windows Mobile. Push Gmail is part of the Google Sync package, which is still in Beta and previously offered only Google Calendar sync and Google Contacts sync. The calendar and contacts features have been working fairly flawlessly for some time now, aside from the inability to support multiple calendars and a few hiccups with the sync connection on some phones. Gmail push, unfortunately, has proven to be somewhat imperfect.

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Buyer Beware: Postseason Baseball on the iPhone

Postseason.TV baseball on the iPhone Major League Baseball just doesn’t get it.  Archaic blackout rules, postseason game times that alienate potential future fans, and an economic system that allows some teams to serve as farm teams for a few big market teams, leave many outsiders scratching their heads.  Add baseball’s latest internet offering, Postseason.TV, to the list of baseball’s facepalm moments.

 

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Screw You iPhone! Stop Stealing All Our (Windows Mobile) Apps…

Screaming Kid, Broken IphoneIn the beginning of August, Microsoft released a detailed case study intended to help developers actually port their iPhone apps over to the Windows Mobile platform, a move that has many Windows Mobile customers, myself included, a bit giddy with hope. We have been turning various shades of green over the past two years, watching those fancy iPhone types with their super-slick apps and their great (by comparison) user interface; not to mention the low prices that they pay for the software. In fact, it has been driving us crazy for some time now that, due to the overwhelming popularity of the iPhone, every new and cool or old and still awesome service out there has bent its mind to the task of creating an iPhone app — leaving Windows Mobile on the backburner, or in the dust completely, regardless of the much larger size of the Windows Mobile user-base.

This new announcement provides some small amount of hope that the Windows Mobile App store (Windows Marketplace for Mobile) will bring with it some of the better iPhone apps when it launches this fall. To that end, I have made up a short list of iPhone apps that I have always wanted to see properly ported to the Windows Mobile platform. Some are already there, in some semblance or other, but could use a better design and more robust functionality. Check them out below:

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10 Awesome iPhone Apps for the Road Warrior

iphoneroad Tech geeks need to stay connected wherever they go.  Well, at least that is what we like to think.  Whether you travel for work, or are on the road with your family during these vacation months, your iPhone can help you to stay in touch, and get the information you need.  Here are ten iPhone apps, or categories of apps, to help you get all types of information, or stay entertained and amused, while you are on your travels.
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Comparison: Griffin Clarifi and Griffin Elan iPhone cases

clarifi2 I previously have professed my love for Evernote as a way to unclutter my life.  One of the nice features of Evernote is its cross-platform support.  I use Evernote on my iPhone to take photographs of notes, business cards, and even wine labels.  The iPhone isn’t ideal for this, as its camera doesn’t have autofocus, and is not designed to take clear photographs of text at close range.  To address this, I purchased the Griffin Clarifi iPhone case.  Read on for my take on the Clarifi, using the Griffin Elan iPhone case as a point of reference.

What makes the Clarifi different from other cases is the lens on the rear, that slides over the iPhone camera lens.  The Clarifi lens acts as a magnifying lens of sorts, making most text much more legible.  The lens slides with the touch of a finger to cover or uncover the iPhone lens.  I had read other reviews that complained that the lens would slide on its own, but I haven’t experienced that problem.  There is plenty of friction, at least on mine, that prevents the lens from sliding until I want to slide it.  Here is an example of the same text taken first with the Clarifi lens in place (top), and then without it (bottom):

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