Rant: You said it, Steve…
I think people are willing to pay for content. I believed it in music, I believe it in media and I believe it in news content.
I think people are willing to pay for content. I believed it in music, I believe it in media and I believe it in news content.
Je ne suis pas le seul à qui c’est arrivé: depuis la version 9.1.1 d’iTunes, quand on branche son iBidule, iTunes ne le reconnaît pas. Redémarrer l’ordinateur, débrancher/rebrancher, jurer comme un charretier, rien ne sert.
La solution, enfouie quelque part dans les tréfonds des fora de support d’Apple, est simple:
Et hop, simple, rapide (une fois iTunes téléchargé, ça met genre 3 minutes – 3 minutes de trop, note…).
Jusqu’à ce qu’Apple sorte une nouvelle version, ça vaut la peine de garder le fichier d’installation d’iTunes (le .dmg téléchargé) sous la main, pour les réinstallations quotidiennes…
This is a free online service that lets you convert a plethora of file formats for consumption on your belovéd iDevice. The process is about as easy as you can make it on an online service:
The formats available as of this writing are:
Note that you’ll need an epub reader installed on your device. For iPad, that’s iBooks or somesuch. On an iPhone, if iBooks isn’t available, you can use one of the many other readers that can digest epub, such as Stanza.
If you have many e-books to convert, a quicker way is to use Calibre, which is a stand-alone application available for OS X, Linux and Windows, that will let you convert books in batches. It’s also free.
Rhodes Mobile is an application development framework for creating Smartphone apps using the Ruby programming language. Looks very cool from where I’m sitting, especially since you can compile your application for all major smartphone platforms, including iPhone, Windows Mobile, Android, Symbian from just one set of source code.
Don’t look at it for gaming, though - it’s more of a platform for Enterprise applications. Think of it as a sort of “Ruby on Rails Light”.
One of the interesting bits to iFanatics is that they claim to be compliant with the new development restrictions Apple has imposed (having to build iPhone apps using Xcode), since their framework generates Obective-C code that has to be build and signed inside Xcode.
Ahaha! This is neat, and free, apparently… Me likes!
Another guide found over at Redmond Pie that explains how to run iPhone Apps that don’t have an iPad equivalent (e.g. Facebook) in full resolution, i.e. without pixel doubling.
Requires a jailbroken iPad and some hackery, so if you’re averse to things like SCP and UNIX command lines, best stay away. Hopefully someone will come up with a little App that handles the modification for you sometime soon, since it’s not all that complicated if you know what you’re doing. :)
Easy-to-use guide on how to tether your WiFi-only iPad to your iPhone so you don’t need to get an iPad 3G with a separate data plan. Note: this requires a jailbroken iPhone and the $9.99 MyWi app (available on Cydia or The Rock).