Google+, the tech giant’s answer to Facebook, arrived yesterday with a lot of hype and promise. And while Google has not yet released a native iOS app for the service just yet, the service’s Apple ties along makes it worth discussing here.
Late yesterday a report surfaced Facebook's first tablet app would arrive on the HP TouchPad and not on the market-leading iPad. Today, Facebook is making it clear that they did not create the app, according to news first reported by TechCrunch.
Facebook’s long-awaited tablet app might not arrive on the iPad, at least first. Instead, the Facebook tablet app will debut on the HP TouchPad, according to TechCrunch.
Our Facebook friends love to upload photos for others to see. Now, iPhone/iPod touch owners can download those photos to their Camera roll using a new app.
A couple of days ago, Jake Behrens (an Apple developer) send out a tweet that was delivered "via iOS." Because the tweet didn't include a content link (photo, video, webpage or map reference), some people got pretty excited, and decided that this suggests that the final version of iOS 5 will allow users to "tweet from anywhere."
Photo apps are released to the App Store weekly. Yet, few arrive with as much fanfare as did Color earlier this year. But, this isn’t a story with a happy ending. Rather, it shows that even an app lined with $41 million in funding isn’t necessarily a success, especially when its would-be customers have no idea how to use it.
When the first iPhone apps hit the market in 2008, Facebook was one of the first ones out of the gate with its own app. The same cannot be said for the iPad, which lacks a native Facebook app. However, that is about to change, according to The New York Times.
Although Apple had less than stellar results with its Ping application via iTunes, this doesn’t mean the company has given up on social networking altogether. In fact, a new patent suggests Apple has other ideas planned in the future to bring people together, according to news first reported by MacRumors.
Earlier today, TechCrunch managed to get its paws on around 50 megabytes of pictures and documents outlining an upcoming Facebook product – namely, “a new photo sharing app for the iPhone,” which the website admits “looks amazing.”
Defend Earth from the cute yet mysterious Mooniz, try to hit a hole in one based on your memory, and drag and bend blue bars to align the stars with today's AGF list.
Users could soon view their Twitter timeline from iOS 5’s new Notification Center. However, this can already be done using a jailbreak via iOS 5 beta. Surprisingly, a U.S.-based teenager created it, according to Redmond Pie.
The folks behind the Path app for the iPhone/iPod touch have finally shown some love for Twitter. However, rather than updating its existing app to include Twitter interaction, it created a new one called With.
The folks behind the popular Twitter app, Tweetbot, have just released a new update. Version 1.2 includes a boatload of new features that makes the app better than ever.
Keep in touch with your colleagues in real-time, play a game of Mahjong while on the go, and help the Doctor solve intricate puzzles with today's AGF list.
If a picture is worth a thousand words, how many is an Emoji worth? Learn to master auto correction, type even faster, and amaze your friends by sending them text messages in Chinese!