ibrth212.pngiBirthday (Repository) sollte in Version 2.1.2 nun endlich soweit Fehlerbereinigt sein, dass der Reminder auch auf eurem iPhone problemlos funktioniert. Das zumindest vermelden die Kollegen von appleiphoneschool. iBirthday läuft im Hintergrund und erinnert, mit einem Popup bzw. einem kurzen Text-Eintrag in der Status-Zeile, an bevorstehende Geburtstage.

Wir hatten das Tool nach etlichen erfolglosen Installations-Versuchen eigentlich schon abgeschrieben. Die hier veröffentlichte Info, dürfte eine erneute Probe-Installation jedoch rechtfertigen:

The app finally works!!! I’m sooooo exited! So, after I set the settings I used Restart to respring my SpringBoard and I waited… thinking I wouldn’t see anything… well, I was taken aback when I got a little Happy Birthday pop-up!! Not only that but after I canceled the pop-up it even did the little message across the top of the SpringBoard!!

Auch Pocket-Touch, die Applikation um das iPhone selbst in der Hosentasche bedienen zu können, kommt mit einem recht umfangreichen Update. Zum einen zeigt das iPhone-Display nun auch die Informationen des gerade laufenden Tracks, zum Anderen wurden die einstellungen um etliche Zusatz-Optionen erweitert. Ein Pocket-Touch Video gibt es hier.

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WordPress 2.5 ist fertig

Posted in Read this at March 31st, 2008 / No Comments »
WordPress 2.5 ist fertig


Die Geschichte der Beziehung von Mensch und Maschine ist eine Geschichte der symbolischen Deutung und Gestaltung dieser Beziehung. Auf der dritten Ausgabe der Ultra Dark Radio – Compilation Serie geht es allerdings weniger um omnipotente Gefühle, sondern vielmehr um den Gegensatz verschiedenster musikalischer Stilrichtungen. So toben sich auf dem ersten Teil der Zusammenstellung vorwiegend Maschinen aus, während Teil 2 handgemachte Gitarrenklänge ans Ohr der Fans bringt.

Inklusive einer exclusiven Version von REEBOSOUND’s “me on the meadow” in der Bandversion. Hörprobe bei MySpace

Die Doppel-Compilation mit insgesamt mehr als 140 Minuten Spielzeit wird ab dem 18.04.2008 in verschiedenen Versionen zum Download angeboten.
Mehr Infos, sowie die komplette Tracklist gibt es HIER

Ein schweizer Einkaufszentrum präsentiert sich mit gut gefüllten Regalen: Zum Mitnehmen gibt es original Apple iPhones mit 8 GB Speicher für 998 Franken (640 Euro) oder 16 GB Speicher für 1250 Franken (800 Euro). Wer es günstiger sucht, bekommt dort auch diverse iPhone-Plagiate ab 315 Franken. Die komplette Story und weitere Bilder gibt es bei 20minuten.ch.
(Danke, bo0om! - Bild: 20minuten.ch)

schweizeriphones.jpg

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Während sich Ebay in den letzten beiden Jahren auf der einen Seite mit Ebay Express abmüht(e), gewann auf der anderen Seite Etsy zunehmend an Fahrt. Einstige Ebay-Nutzer wurden zu Etsy-Fans. Noch tun die Nutzerwanderungen Ebay in keinster Weise weh, aber es lohnt sich doch mal nachzufragen (via):

"Hi Etsy, Ebay sent me an invitation to an online survey, because I have been spending less on them (and more on Etsy!)"

Auf die Frage "Weshalb kaufen Sie lieber bei Etsy ein?", antwortet diese Etsy-Nutzerin im Etsy-Forum:

"For Etsy, more friendly, less fees for sellers, not a huge corporation that only cares about its shareholders.

Plenty of the things I was looking for. Lots of fun with all the features they offer for finding items. Constant articles, easy to use forums.

More focus on involving the end-user and keeping everyone up to date.

When something goes wrong, they tell us the reason why, they don't try to sweep it under the carpet.

I haven't had a need to use their customer support yet, but I haven't seen any complaints about it on the forum."

Inzwischen gibt es im Etsy-Forum ein paar weitere Stimmen zur Umfrage:

"I am surprised I haven't gotten one. I used to spend there what I do here now.

I just bought my 3rd thing since Christmas at Ebay, and I used to buy everyday there."

Etsy möchte 2008 einen Händlerumsatz von 100 Mio. Euro erzielen.

Frühere Beiträge zum Thema:

Gartner analyst Ken Dulaney believes Apple has placed an order for 10 million 3G iPhone units
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iPhone-Engpass in den USA

Posted in Read this at March 26th, 2008 / No Comments »

usstore.gifIn allen drei New Yorker Apple Stores sind beide iPhone-Modelle restlos ausverkauft. Laut Huffington Post ist auch völlig unklar, wann neue Geräte geliefert werden. Die Aussage eines Store-Mitarbeiters “You can always go online” ist zwar nicht grundlegend falsch, nur hilft es nicht allzu viel da auch der amerikanische Apple Online-Store schlecht bestückt scheint: hier wird die Wartezeit mit 5 bis 7 Arbeitstagen angegeben.

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Microsoft zeigt Interesse am iPhone

Posted in Read this at March 26th, 2008 / No Comments »

Fortune berichtet ausführlich über einen interessanten Stimmungswechsel bei Microsoft: das iPhone wird nicht mehr ignoriert oder verlacht, sondern man sieht eine neue Möglichkeit, zum Beispiel durch die “Portierung” von MS Office Kapital zu schöpfen:

“Tom Gibbons, head of Microsoft’s Specialized Devices and Applications Group, said the focus would be on extending Office functions onto the iPhone and iPod touch.”

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OpenSocial Makes a Statement

Posted in Read this at March 25th, 2008 / No Comments »

This morning I wrote about the new OpenSocial foundation. Unfortunately I missed out on the press call but there were definitely some key takeaways. Marshall Kirkpatrick provides a great writeup of the call. Two significant statements made was that Orkut will go live next week and that 200 million users will be reached by all the applications.

Who wasn’t present on the phone call? Facebook and Microsoft. These are the two remaining companies that have not joined OpenSocial. They are still holding out an ultimately are trying to battle the underdog who has gained significant momentum: OpenSocial. It’s hard to call any standard promoted by Google an “underdog” but technically there are less application install on their platform but more potential users.

Read more on the Social Times

From right here in Philly's backyard, Ringside Networks came out of stealth mode yesterday to launch the first open source "social application server."

And what is that exactly?

It's the software guts of a social network that you can use behind your own firewall, old school style, to build social networking "stuff" into your own site.

Companies that want to build social applications (for runners sharing times at Runlicious) or socially aware marketing programs (like Jeep owners sharing pictures and videos) will be able to use social servers to develop the whole thing on their own websites. Their brand on their site instead of their brand on Facebook next to the "get help for your gambling problem" advertisement.

Developing a social network will be harder to do this way than it would be using a white label network like Ning, but it will be completely customizable, will integrate neatly into the rest of the site, and all the data will be right there for the application owner to mine.

That's the simple version anyway; use social servers to roll your own social apps and sites. But I also wonder how it might upset the balance of power inside the behemoth walled gardens of Facebook and Myspace.

OpenSocial took the first shot at the garden walls with a goal of empowering users to keep their social data portable (well, portable inside Google anyway). However, while OpenSocial promises developers social apps without servers, Ringside is saying that at least some developers are going to want their own stuff under their control. I think social app servers are going to take shots at the wall too, but with the social networking advertisers and application ecosystem as the core constituency.

By supporting Facebook's API (with other API's to follow), Ringside makes it a lot simpler to take a social application written for Facebook and move it to its own site, or visa versa as shown in this picture. This kind of write once deliver anywhere approach to social applications raises all kinds of interesting possibilities.

Like,... Don't want to have to enter your favorite beers into Beer! in both Facebook and Myspace? If Beer! builds their application on a social server that can tie your Facebook user name to your Myspace user name, you won't have to. Facebook and Myspace just become two points of presence for the application, and they'll be on equal terms with Beer!'s own web site. Wherever you log in, you see your beers and (most of) your beer friends.

Facebook opened up this possibility when they designed their platform to have the developer's servers do the heavy lifting. Doing it this way meant they didn't have to provide all of the servers and gear to run the applications, but it also means that it's easier to stick a social server outside the wall and treat it and other branded networks like distribution shelf space. Once an application can seamlessly span the networks, it can do more than map a user's identity across sites, it may also piece together a social graph that is bigger than any one site's. Sort of an application-specific super graph.

In one possible end state, users own all of "their" social graph and data in OpenSocial, and application providers own all of "their" social graph and data in their own social application servers. Meanwhile, the big branded social networks are still in the game with very large "lily pad graphs," but they no longer see the whole picture for any one user or any single application.

As this evolves we may see developers building first for Facebook and Myspace to get quick viral adoption in a huge audience. However, as soon as they can they may start to drive traffic over to their own sites where they can provide a better or different interface with a more carefully managed brand experience. Imagine if NBC let you show your first YouTube video from a planned series at 7pm on Thursday, for free.

Or, developers may use the write once deliver everywhere strategy to deliver their app as widely as possible. Where Facebook and Myspace were once king, in this scenario they may end up as two of many application points of presence with awareness of only a piece of the associated social graph. The successful application developer with a network-spanning super graph might then be free to monetize it however and wherever they can.

Well, at least until the API wars start in earnest. There is a good reason for the server to be open source, it will spread the load of keeping up with all those inevitable API changes.