Showing posts with label Web Browser. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Web Browser. Show all posts

Updated! Got Gmail Problems with iPhone OS 2.2?

Author: Khate // Category: , ,

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I noticed 3 messages stuck in my Gmail outbox post-OS 2.2 upgrade. Just sitting there. Mocking me. “Sending” but never getting “sent”. Following a comment by Matt, I re-typed my password and voila, the intertubes they were cleared.

Not sure if this will work for everyone, either by itself or with a reset, but give it a try and let us know.

UPDATE: scottb helps out earnie in the comments with a Google link for unlocking display Captcha to overcome an invalid sender address problem. Our readers rock!

Any other trouble-shooting tips? Keep ‘em coming!

Article by TheiPhoneBlog.


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Apple approves third-party email client for the App Store, violates its own policies

Author: Khate // Category: , , ,

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Recently we were sent a PR email about an iPhone app called BdEmailer. No big deal, press releases about new iPhone applications show up in our box in large bundles every day -- but this one was different. According to the release, the program is the "the first wide email iPhone app that supports client SMTP." That means, in essence, that it duplicates an exact function of Apple's Mail application on the iPhone and touch. That's kind of a huge deal, because up until this point we've been led to believe that this duplication of functionality is one of the company's red flags when it comes to approval. Now mind you, we're not complaining. The idea of having more apps to choose from for doing things like sending email is a great idea, but Apple... what the hell is going on? You refused MailWrangler and Podcaster for similar reasons, yet BdEmailer passes through your review process, SMTP functionality intact? This means one of two things as far as we can tell -- either you've relaxed your policies on duplicate functionality, or you've gotten incredibly lazy when it comes to approving applications. We're inclined to believe it's the latter, as BdEmailer has a fair share of bugs that need working out, but really, people need some clarification here on what will and won't pass -- and moving the goalpost all the time isn't going to help.

By Engadget.


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Google Using Private API’s For Advanced Voice Search?

Author: Khate // Category: , , ,

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Is Google using private (i.e., not publicly available via the official iPhone SDK) APIs to create the silky-smooth “raise the phone and talk” activation for their new Advanced Voice Search feature in the update Google Mobile App? That’s the latest question Daring Fireball’s been looking into, and here’s what they’ve found so far:

If you use something like the command-line strings utility to examine the UIKit framework, you can see that there’s an undocumented (and therefore private to Apple) method named proximityStateChanged. And if one were to strip the FairPlay DRM from the current Google Mobile application binary — which, of course, you wouldn’t do, because you’re not supposed to strip FairPlay DRM, but I’m just saying if one were to do this — a class dump of the application binary would show that Google Mobile does in fact implement proximityStateChanged.

DF posits three possible explinations: 1) No one at Apple noticed the private API usage, 2) Apple noticed but turned a blind-eye, or 3) Apple approved the use of a private API. Citing sources, DF claims #3 to not be the case, and perhaps that’s why Google promoted the feature to heavily — and stirred up interest so high Apple would feel pressure to approve it (though we wonder if Steve Jobs’ Apple ever feels that type of pressure?)

By contrast, DF states #1 is not without precedence, while #2 would be grossly unfair to other developers, and either way, users may suffer if Apple makes changes to their private APIs (which is one of the reasons to keep them private after all).

So what do you think? Which scenario is most likely? And what would you rather, that developers (Google or not) use officially unsupported features if it means better apps but also apps that might just break when the next firmware drops?

Article by TheiPhoneBlog.


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Google Mobile App now Available for iPhone and iPod Touch

Author: Khate // Category: , , ,

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Now Google Mobile App is available for both iPhone and iPod Touch but only the voice-recognition works with iPhone. It is an easy function app to use the voice-based search of the Google Mobile app. iPhone has been so impressive with almost every new applications.

Interesting thins is the “Search with my location” feature, which automatically tracks down a user’s whereabouts in order to serve local search results, which come in quite handy for some particular search terms (such as “movie showtimes,” “nearby hospitals,” et cetera).

[Google Mobile Blog]

Article by http://www.zoomgadget.com/2008/11/google-mobile-app-now-available-for.html


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URLs for iPhone-Optimized Google Sites

Author: Khate // Category: , ,

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Google's interfaces optimized for iPhone, Android and WebKit-based browsers look extremely well and they have more features than the standard mobile versions. For example, Google's homepage shows suggestions and has customizable navigation links, iGoogle shows all your feeds and gadgets and Google Talk lets you chat with your contacts. If you want to try them from your computer or from a mobile phone that has a modern browser, here are the direct links (some of the pages won't work very well):

* Google homepage (the unified interface codenamed "Grand Prix") - http://www.google.com/m/gp
* Google Apps homepage - http://www.google.com/m/a/YOUR_DOMAIN
* iGoogle - http://www.google.com/ig/i
* Gmail - http://mail.google.com/mail/x/gdlakb-/gp/
* Google Calendar - http://www.google.com/calendar/gp
* Google Reader - http://www.google.com/reader/i/
* Google Docs - http://docs.google.com/m?iphone=true
* Google Talk - http://talkgadget.google.com/talkgadget/m
* Google News - http://www.google.com/m/news/i

Original post: http://googlesystem.blogspot.com/2008/11/urls-for-iphone-optimized-google-sites.html?showComment=1226910360000#c4891598412519831517


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Some Free Application for iPhone from Apple

Author: Khate // Category: , , , , , ,

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May be you just want to try some free Applications first before spending some of your money with the paid program.

Here are some free program for you:

1. The Background: Find new wallpaper for your iPhone with Backgrounds.- Browse over 1000 unique backgrounds from many different sources

Backgrounds

2. The Weather Channel: Leave it to The Weather Channel, the most trusted brand in weather, to deliver the perfect weather application for you.

.The Weather ChannelĀ®

3.DigiDrummer Lite: Enjoy fun with music.

DigiDrummer Lite

4. Urbanspoon: Can't decide where to eat? Urbanspoon can help. Shake your iPhone and the Urbanspoon slot machine will pick a good place.

Urbanspoon

5. Google Earth: Hold the world in the palm of your hand. With Google Earth for iPhone and iPod touch, you can fly to far corners of world.

Google Earth


6. Shazam: When you hear a song and wonder what it is, Shazam is there with the answer.

Shazam

7. ZooZBeat Lite: Unlock your musical expression and creative potential with ZooZBeat™!ZooZBeat is a gesture-based musical studio, simp.

ZooZBeat Lite

8. PAC-MAN Lite: Available on all iPhone and iPod Touch devices!Take a chomp of the arcade classic, right on your iPhone / iPod Touch!

PAC-MAN Lite

9. Black Mamba Lite: Black Mamba Lite is a FREE, cut-down version of StarByte's Black Mamba Racer.

Black Mamba Lite

10. Say Who: Now make calls by speaking any CONTACT NAME or PHONE NUMBER - accurately and quickly. Why dial when you can speak?

Say Who


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iPhone tethering plan to include 5GB cap, cost $30+?

Author: Khate // Category: , , ,

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iPhones with Applications
According to sources from the MacBlogz site, we now have some more detailed information about the iPhone tethering plan on which AT&T said they were working. The first of these details is the 5GB bandwidth cap. The rumor says this cap may be introduced to all AT&T tethering plans to accommodate for all the new plans they are expecting, and adds that AT&T will cut off your tethering plan for that month once the cap is reached. It also states the connection for this tethering might be through Apple’s own iTunes, so you won’t need to install any additional software on the desktop side of things.

The rumor has “no idea on a launch date,“ but believes AT&T will roll out new plans for the iPhone that include tethering for additional $30 or so a month. It also states there will be no unlimited option, as AT&T will simply tell you to buy a wireless PC card. Nonetheless, this is a very interesting rumor. My only request would be a lesser monthly charge, as the iPhone plans are pretty expensive here in the US already. Now, only one question remains’ will it be coming out with the iPhone 2.2 Software?

Article by AppleTell.


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Google Is Taking Questions (Spoken, via iPhone)

Author: Khate // Category: , , , ,

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SAN FRANCISCO — Pushing ahead in the decades-long effort to get computers to understand human speech, Google researchers have added sophisticated voice recognition technology to the company’s search software for the Apple iPhone.

Users of the free application, which Apple is expected to make available as soon as Friday through its iTunes store, can place the phone to their ear and ask virtually any question, like “Where’s the nearest Starbucks?” or “How tall is Mount Everest?” The sound is converted to a digital file and sent to Google’s servers, which try to determine the words spoken and pass them along to the Google search engine.

The search results, which may be displayed in just seconds on a fast wireless network, will at times include local information, taking advantage of iPhone features that let it determine its location.

The ability to recognize just about any phrase from any person has long been the supreme goal of artificial intelligence researchers looking for ways to make man-machine interactions more natural. Systems that can do this have recently started making their way into commercial products.

Both Yahoo and Microsoft already offer voice services for cellphones. The Microsoft Tell me service returns information in specific categories like directions, maps and movies. Yahoo’s oneSearch with Voice is more flexible but does not appear to be as accurate as Google’s offering. The Google system is far from perfect, and it can return queries that appear as gibberish. Google executives declined to estimate how often the service gets it right, but they said they believed it was easily accurate enough to be useful to people who wanted to avoid tapping out their queries on the iPhone’s touch-screen keyboard.

The service can be used to get restaurant recommendations and driving directions, look up contacts in the iPhone’s address book or just settle arguments in bars. The query “What is the best pizza restaurant in Noe Valley?” returns a list of three restaurants in that San Francisco neighborhood, each with starred reviews from Google users and links to click for phone numbers and directions.

Raj Reddy, an artificial intelligence researcher at Carnegie Mellon University who has done pioneering work in voice recognition, said Google’s advantage in this field was the ability to store and analyze vast amounts of data. “Whatever they introduce now, it will greatly increase in accuracy in three or six months,” he said.

“It’s important to understand that machine recognition will never be perfect,” Mr. Reddy added. “The question is, How close can they come to human performance?” For Google the technology is critical to its next assault on the world of advertising. Google executives said location-based queries would make it possible to charge higher rates for advertisements from nearby businesses, for example, although it is not selling such ads now.

As with other Google products the service is freely available to consumers, and the company plans to eventually make it available for phones other than the iPhone.

“We are dramatically increasing value to the advertiser through location and voice,” said Vic Gundotra, a former Microsoft executive who now heads Google’s mobile businesses.

Google is by no means the only company working toward more advanced speech recognition capabilities. So-called voice response technology is now routinely used in telephone answering systems and in other consumer services and products. These systems, however, often have trouble with the complexities of free-form language and usually offer only a limited range of responses to queries.

Several weeks ago Adobe added voice recognition technology developed by Autonomy, a British firm, to its Creative Suite software, allowing it to generate transcripts of video and audio recordings with a high degree of accuracy.

Mr. Gundotra said Google had been tackling the twin problems of entering and retrieving information with hand-held wireless devices.

“Solving those two problems in a world-class way is our goal,” he said.

The new iPhone search capability is not the first speech offering from Google. In March, it announced that GOOG-411, an experimental directory information service, had turned into a real product. The service allows users to ask for business phone and address information. The company said it had built on its experience and the data it collected through GOOG-411 in developing the iPhone service.

The new service is an example of the way Google tries to blend basic computer science research with product engineering. The company has hired many of the best speech recognition researchers in the world and now has teams working on different aspects of the problem in New York, London and its headquarters in Mountain View, Calif.

An intriguing part of the overall design of the service was contributed by a Google researcher in London, who found a way to use the iPhone accelerometer — the device that senses how the phone is held — to set the software to “listen” mode when the phone is raised to the user’s ear.

Google researchers said that another of its advantages over competitors was the billions of queries its users have made over the years.

“One thing that has changed is the amount of computation and the amount of data that is available,” said Mike Cohen, a speech research who was co-founder of Nuance Communications before coming to Google.

Past queries can be used to build a statistical model of the way words are frequently strung together, Mr. Cohen said. This is just one of the components of the speech recognition system, which also includes a sound analysis model and a mechanism for linking the basic components of language to actual words.

Google recently published a technical paper on building large models for machine translation of language. The researchers wrote that they had trained the system on two trillion “tokens,” or words.

By NyTimes


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iPhone Microsoft Office due in 2009

Author: Khate // Category: , ,

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Original source: http://www.pmptoday.com/2008/11/14/iphone-microsoft-office-due-in-2009/



Microsoft is apparently planning to launch a Microsoft Office web-based application that will be accessible through the internet using browsers such as Internet Explorer, FireFox and yes, even the mobile Safari on the iPhone. No add-ons, jailbreak or special apps are required to run this new web app, though clear details about what it will feature are pretty scarce at the moment. We’ve heard that a private preview of this Microsoft Web Office will be available before the year comes to a close, but what we’re more interested to find out is when exactly it will be publicly be made available. All we’re certain for now is that it will come out in 2009. Anyway, for what it’s worth, the availability of such an application will further boost the functionality of the iPhone and make those who still believe that it is just an over-priced iPod think otherwise.


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