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Posts tagged ‘iPad’

3
Apr

Evernote’s Penultimate for iPad now behaves more like a real notebook


Penultimate for iPad

Penultimate is supposed to mimic a notebook on your iPad, so it only makes sense that the app’s interface should mirror the pen-and-paper experience as much as possible. Right? Evernote thinks so, as it has released a Penultimate update that gets closer to the real thing. You can swipe from off-screen to turn pages, and you can set a color for every pen width; effectively, you now have a collection of favorite pens. Not all of the updates are meant to simulate analog drawing. Penultimate notes look much nicer when seen from Evernote, and there are improvements to ink rendering, palm recognition and connections with Jot Script pens. The upgraded app still won’t replicate the feel of actual notebooks, but you might not miss them quite so much.

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Via: The Next Web

Source: App Store, Evernote Blog

3
Apr

Blizzard takes a stab at mobile gaming, brings its free card game to the iPad


Hearthstone on iPad

Blizzard hasn’t really had a presence in mobile gaming… not unless you think the Battle.net Authenticator is rip-roaring entertainment, anyway. However, the developer is giving the category an honest try today by releasing Hearthstone for the iPad. Much like on the desktop, the free-to-play card game lets you fight both real and virtual opponents as you build up a collection of Warcraft-themed minions and spells. Decks sync between devices, so you won’t have to start from scratch. The title is currently available on the App Store in Australia, Canada and New Zealand; more countries are coming soon, and those using Android, iPhones and Windows tablets can also expect to play in the near future. The iPad app isn’t likely to replicate the off-the-charts success of Blizzard’s PC titles, but the company has to start somewhere. And besides, we’ve seen the problems that some major game producers have faced after downplaying the importance of phones and tablets — Blizzard may be wise to cover its bases.

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Via: AppAdvice

Source: App Store, Blizzard

2
Apr

iWork upgrade lets you share read-only documents


Numbers update in iWork for iCloud

Apple isn’t letting the launch of Office for iPad go completely unanswered. It’s pushing out a slew of iWork updates that might not keep Microsoft awake at night, but should fill in a few conspicuous feature gaps. You can now share read-only documents, for one thing — you no longer have to worry that others will mess with a Pages report. You can also open iWork documents from iCloud webmail, and there’s a host of cross-app improvements that include a new editor tab and the option of modifying imported charts. All the upgrades are available on iCloud, iOS and the Mac, so you can check out the many, many tweaks for yourself.

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Via: 9to5 Mac

Source: iWork for iCloud, App Store

31
Mar

Ultrakam lets your iPhone capture higher resolution film-like video clips


While Sony and Samsung are busy making phones with 4K recording capabilities, one developer has worked its pixel magic to get more from iPhone cameras. Ultrakam is the first iOS app capable of recording “2K” resolution with a film-like 24p frame rate, letting iPhone 5s owners shoot 2240 x 1672 pixel video (around 75 percent more pixels than regular HD) to output higher-quality footage than the default camera app. There’s support for the iPhone 5 and 5c, as well as the the iPad mini, iPad Air and iPad with Retina display, but the app is limited to high-definition and “2K” at 20fps on “older” devices.

Including an array of settings and various shooting modes that allow you to record higher bit-rate video and audio, with a minute of footage consuming up to 3GB of storage on max settings (expect that 64GB iPhone 5s to fill up fast), Ultrakam is primarily aimed at filmmakers. However, there’s plenty of neat features for regular users to show off their talent. It offers slow motion video, but again the iPhone 5s has all the fun, as it supports slow motion capture at 120fps over the iPhone 5′s 60fps. You can slow down your recordings by up to 10x if you choose the lowest preset. The app also supports timelapse shooting, offering custom configurations that will snap high resolution photos at set intervals, combining them to output a high-quality landscape. Once you’ve shot your footage, Ultrakam’s built-in player and editing tools let you play video, generate stills, color correct and share them with ease. Ultrakam is available on the App Store for $6.99 — a little more costly than your regular camera app, but the extra quality and advanced features may justify the price.

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Via: The Next Web

Source: Ultrakam, (App Store)

31
Mar

Weekends with Engadget: the future of Oculus Rift, new HTC One review and more!


Weekends with Engadget

Welcome to Weekends with Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines from the past seven days — all handpicked by the editors here at the site. For even more news, subscribe to our Flipboard magazine!

Can Oculus survive the Facebook effect?

Earlier this week, the internet responded to Facebook’s $2 billion acquisition of Oculus VR with a swift fury. But it’s not all bad news. Our own Marc Perton points out, the deal doesn’t change the essence of the Oculus Rift, or its potential for non-gaming applications.

HTC One review (2014): a great phone, but no longer a game-changer

HTC’s new One is official, and it’s quite the looker. With a sleek unibody chassis reminiscent of last year’s model, the new One packs a larger 5-inch screen, and a brand new version of its Sense UI. What’s more, the handset is one sale in the US today, starting at $199 for the 16GB version.

iTunes Radio now streams the news, thanks to NPR

Last week, NPR announced that it joined iTunes Radio as the music streaming service’s first news channel. It may be the exclusive station for iDevice users at the moment, but we expect that won’t last for long.

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Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon review (2014): new, but not necessarily improved

The new ThinkPad X1 Carbon brings everything Lenovo fans loved about the original X1 Carbon, just in a lighter, slimmer package. Some users, however, may not enjoy its new “adaptive panel,” which replaces the traditional Fn keys. You can pick one up for $1,259, but be warned: the X1 Carbon has the shortest battery life in its class.

Turkish government bans YouTube following attempt to remove corruption videos

The Turkish government has struck again, this time banning YouTube in what appears to be an attempt to remove videos that contain evidence of political corruption. At this point, the restriction is active on several ISPs and continues to roll out.

San Francisco Giants (and most of MLB) adopt Apple’s iBeacon for an enhanced ballpark experience

The iBeacon is a small Apple device that boosts iPhone location services through Bluetooth — and the San Francisco Giants are outfitting their entire stadium with the tech. For the Giants, as well as 19 other MLB teams following suit, the iBeacon is yet another way to bring mobile interaction with fans to the next level.

Facebook: A visual history

Mark Zuckerberg’s social network turned 10 this year, so we took a look back at its design changes over the course of the decade. From profile redesigns to quarterly News Feed tweaks and open betas, constantly adapting aesthetics to catering to user habits has been a driving force for Facebook for quite some time.

Office for iPad review: three beautiful apps, each with strong competition

After quite a few leaks, Microsoft officially outed its Office for iPad offering. Those curious to try it out will need an Office 365 subscription in order to opt in and OneDrive for cloud accessibility, making it an optimal choice for those already invested in Redmond’s wares. Click through for all of the details in our full review.

This is what Facebook could look like on Oculus Rift (video)

As you’re probably aware, Facebook dropped $2 billion on Oculus VR with the intent to bring “completely new kinds of experiences” to us all. And while that leaves much to the imagination, Chaotic Moon studios has an idea of what that could look like.

NSA spied on Huawei founder’s emails to implicate him as a Communist Party insider

The New York Times managed to get a glimpse of documents suggesting that the NSA was hacking into the email account of Huawei founder, Ren Zhengfei. Apparently the government has been creating “back doors” in the company’s systems since 2009.

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29
Mar

Future Office for iPad update will let you print your documents


Microsoft Word for iPad

Although the Office for iPad suite is relatively full-featured, it won’t print hard copies. That’s a glaring omission even in this increasingly paperless era, we’d say. Not to worry, though: Microsoft tells PCWorld that printing support is coming as part of future app updates. The company hasn’t said just when those upgrades are due, but Office general manager Julia White promises to “iterate very fast” on the fledgling productivity software. In the meantime, don’t toss out your conventional PC — you may need it to print out that next contract or term paper.

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Source: PCWorld

29
Mar

Study shows which Android and iOS versions are most likely to crash apps


Crittercism's Android crash rate findings

If you’ve ever argued that your new smartphone is more reliable than what you’re replacing, you now have some evidence to back up your claims. Crittercism has posted a study showing that apps running in newer versions of Android and iOS (such as KitKat and iOS 7.1) are considerably less likely to crash; you’re practically inviting headaches if you stick with a phone running Gingerbread or iOS 6. The research also suggests that the Galaxy S 4 and iPhone 5 are the most trustworthy devices, while tablets of all kinds are relatively crash-happy. The findings aren’t shocking when both Apple and Google have both spent years fixing bugs, and it’s notable that the study only covers crashes with third-party apps — they don’t address first-party software glitches. Still, this data is as good an excuse as any to upgrade an aging handset stuck on an old platform.

Crittercism's iOS crash rate findings

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Via: GigaOM

Source: Crittercism (DocumentCloud)

28
Mar

Want a free year of Office 365? Bring your iPad to a Microsoft Store


Microsoft's Office 365 iPad promotion

If you’re enamored with Office for iPad but don’t want to fork over $70-plus per year for the necessary Office 365 subscription, you’ll want to make a beeline to your local Microsoft Store this weekend. Microsoft has launched a promo that will offer a free year of Office 365 to the first 50 people who bring an iPad to a given retail location from March 28th through March 30th. You’ll undoubtedly have to hustle if you want to take advantage of the deal, but the trek could be worthwhile if you like the idea of giving Office an extra-long trial run.

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Via: ZDNet

Source: Microsoft (Facebook)

28
Mar

With iPad app, Microsoft begins to move out of the office


ipad

Microsoft finally announced a version of its Office productivity suite for the iPad today, and it’s a solid, functional set of apps. As we say in our review, “Office for iPad is elegantly designed, with a robust feature set and intuitive layout.” And it’s free, as long as you’re only interested in reading or viewing docs, that is. Want to edit that spreadsheet, or create your own PowerPoint deck? You’ll need an Office 365 subscription, starting at about $10 a month. That may seem steep compared to the price of some other iPad productivity apps, like Apple’s iWork suite, which is free for some iPad users. But that price includes the full desktop versions of the Office suite, which you can install on up to five computers.

Desktop versions? Computers? Who still uses those things? That’s a question Microsoft has been grappling with for the past few years, and it’s one of the biggest challenges facing new CEO Satya Nadella, who made his first public appearance in his new role as part of today’s event. Office has long been one of Microsoft’s biggest sources of revenue; in the company’s 2013 fiscal year, business software brought in $25 billion. And Office is still used by as many as 90 percent of businesses, according to one recent study. But that doesn’t mean Microsoft isn’t worried about the future of its cash cow.

Office is, despite today’s launch, primarily a product designed to be used on traditional PCs. But PC shipments have been dropping for years, and 2013 saw the steepest plunge ever, with a decline of almost 10 percent. Mobile devices now outsell PCs, and other than the small number of tablets running Windows 8, they don’t support the full version of Microsoft Office. And cloud-based services like Google Apps appeal to users with multiple devices, who know they can access the latest version of their work anywhere, and effortlessly share it with anyone. That’s why today’s Microsoft event, despite being teased and leaked as the Office for iPad launch, was as much about Office 365 and enterprise cloud services as anything else.

Office 365, along with its online components and mobile apps like the new iPad version, is Microsoft’s attempt to hold onto the productivity software business even as the market around it is rapidly changing. Designed to appeal to corporate IT managers who might be tempted to switch to Google Apps, small businesses that want industrial-strength software without the overhead of a support team and consumers who can’t bear to give up those complex Excel macros, Office 365′s subscription plan is a good deal when compared with Office’s traditional pricing model, if you make full use of the entire Office suite on multiple desktop and mobile devices and upgrade to each new version on schedule.

However, for users who rely primarily on mobile devices, or computers like Chromebooks, which now account for 20 percent of laptop sales, Office 365 is a harder sell, and Office for iPad isn’t going to help there, at least not on its own. If you don’t use 365′s desktop components, there’s little incentive to pay for access to the online versions or Office for iPad, especially when other apps, which can read and write Office docs, are available for free. But that dynamic may change, especially as paying for premium versions of other cloud-based services becomes more common. Evernote estimates that as many as 25 percent of its customers convert to its premium service over time, and Google has managed to sign up 5 million businesses for the premium version of Google Apps.

Office 365 isn’t the only piece of Microsoft’s cloud strategy, and Nadella, who ran the company’s cloud business before ascending to the CEO role, spent as much time today talking about enterprise services and developer tools as he did about Office for iPad. But Office has long been the product, even more than Windows, that defined the company for millions of consumers and business customers around the world. Today’s launch shows that Microsoft is making an effort to address the new realities of a productivity software market being driven by mobile devices and cloud storage.

Analysts who follow Microsoft see Office 365 subscription revenues approaching $3 billion a year in the near future. That’s a far cry from Microsoft’s $25 billion business software revenue, and the company is now in the middle of a delicate balancing act, as it tries to transition to the new cloud- and mobile-based world, without cannibalizing its existing, and still highly lucrative, desktop business. The fact that Nadella is now in the driver’s seat seems to indicate that the company knows which direction to take. The only question is, can Nadella get there fast enough?

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27
Mar

Watch Satya Nadella’s first major appearance as Microsoft CEO live


Rumor has it, Microsoft is getting ready to take the wraps off of Office for iPad. Despite that move potentially signaling a shift away from a Windows-first software strategy, the iOS app won’t be the only star of the show. It’s going to have to share the limelight with yet another, largely untested asset: CEO Satya Nadella. Given his track record at the company and recent statements, we expect to hear plenty about mobile, the cloud and Microsoft as a devices and services company.

Chances are, he won’t come out sweating and screaming like his predecessor, but if you’re curious to see how Nadella stacks up or, you know, have a thing for Redmond’s productivity suite, you can watch it all play out here or at the source link below. And get ready for even more of Nadella and the Microsoft crew when they hit the mean streets of San Francisco for the Build developer conference next week.


Watch Satya Nadella Live @ 1PM ET

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Source: Microsoft