The Local Wisdom Blog

The Local Wisdom Blog
Jul 13

2 great examples of CSS3

Posted by: Pinaki Kathiari

The new stuff coming out in Cascading Style Sheets and HTML is amazing. What required mounds and mounds of code can now be done in a few lines of text. What required graphics can not be done programmatically on the browser. Here are three great examples:

Alex Girón and his Solar System

Alex is a Web Developer and Graphic Designer out of Virginia. He is the creative director from nclude. He set out to explore the border-radius features and came up with something interesting. This working model of the Milky Way Solar system shows the planets using border-radius and their orbits and revolutions using –web kit animation properties and transform.

Jeff Batterton and his iPhone


Jeff is a User Interface designer and he’s coded an iPhone with a working world clock with NO IMAGES WHATSOEVER. Click on the image to see what I’m talking about. Its all carefully crafted markup and CSS. Keep in mind that this will only display correctly on a webkit browser and has only been tested in Google Chrome. It seems to look fine on Safari 5, but not FireFox 3.6 (definitely not Internet Explorer).






Jul 03

A Plethora of curated design works

Posted by: Pinaki Kathiari

Plethora is a great source of personally curated design and art work spanning a series of disciplines. Although the best inspiration comes from the real world, this iPhone app is a great free place to see aggregated work for: web & interactive, graphic design, branding, art, illustration, photography, product and industrial design, interior design, and architecture.

Learn more from the Plethora website or download from itunes.





Jun 23

Disable suggested contacts in Outlook 2010 so your Iphone contact list doesnR...

Posted by: Michael Alfaro

I just installed Outlook 2010 and saw my contact list double in size on my IPhone soon after.  Took me a while to see that it added a “Suggested List” to the iphone where all these extra contacts were coming from.  I found a blog post that shows how to remove the suggested list completely from outlook 2010, thus fixing the problem on the Iphone here:  http://www.blackonstuff.com/2010-01-28/how-to-disable-suggested-contacts-in-outlook-2010/

You can also just look at your “Contacts” group on your Iphone instead of “All Contacts” and that would help you ignore the “Suggested Contacts” list, but if you have 2 or more contact groups that you need like from yahoo, gmail, exchange and such, then the solution below is a better option:

“Access the File tab and then the Options on the left …”



“… then the Contacts group and uncheck the “Automatically create Outlook contacts for recipients that do not belong to an Outlook Address Book”. After that, just delete all the harvested contacts in the Suggested Contacts folder and your iPhone will automatically update with just the contacts you’ve added.”





Jun 07

iPhone4… I want one

Posted by: Pinaki Kathiari

I’m a little late in seeing the new and official iphone 4 videos. I must say, it looks absolutely amazing. Its a technological, engineering, and manufacturing marvel that its rocketing us into the future that we’ve only been seeing in sci-fi movies.

Facetime is the new video conferencing. It seems that both callers will need to be on a wifi network to use this feature. You can switch between front and back cameras at any time so that your caller will be able to see you or whats in front of you.

Retina display is the the new 960 x 640 display,  the highest resolution screen in a smart phones to date. 326 pixels per inch which is 4 times the current iphone. Apple engineers have made the pixel even smaller so that the human eye won’t notice pixelation. Optical lamination is the process that eliminates light refraction to optimize the visual clarity.

Multitasking is now available. You can double click the home button and the interface slides up to show the apps that you are currently running.

Folders is fresh. Not a new concept, but the interaction is quite amazing. You hold down an app on the home screen and drag it on top of another app to group them in a folder. That’s like 3 steps less than any OS we’re used to. The folder is automatically named based on the apps that you’ve grouped together.

The mail app has been rearranged a bit to have all your inboxes together. No need to jump back 2 times and then forward 2 times to view another inbox. Messages are also organized by thread and so you’ll be able to track by topic.

The camera is now 5 megapixels (Rjay will love it for our homepage) and it comes with a led flash so low light shots will be way better, hopefully. The video camera captures video in 720p high definition at 30 frames per second (not sure how many frames per second are on the 3Gs). iMovie is coming to the iPhone allowing you to edit and stitch videos together while your on the move.

The A4 chip adds more power. This gets into the engineering marvel that I wrote about earlier. It will make the iPhone faster and more powerful, but the chip itself is smaller than the current phone which allows for a bigger battery.

Bigger battery means more life. We have up to 40% more talk time.

The new frame is a new stainless steel alloy that Apple has created?!?! WTF? Its supposed to be 5 times stronger than standard steel. This band also acts as the antenna for the phone boosting the range. This frame also makes the iPhone 4 actually smaller than its predecessors.

As we talk about engineering feats, the front and back of the phone is made with a newly engineered glass which is comparable to sapphire crystal and is 20 times stiffer and 30 times harder than plastic. This makes it more scratch resistant and durable.

The accelerometer has been coupled with a three-axis gyroscope. This makes motion sensing even better allowing the phone to know more about whats happening to it in its spatial environment.

A secondary mic has been added to the top of the iPhone. This is used for suppressing external sounds like other conversations and music. This should help you sound better when talking in a noisy place.

All this makes an app developer’s imagination soar. I can’t wait to see what things will come out of the phone as far as apps.

So you can pre-order the phone starting June 15th and actually get your hands on it by June 24th. There will be two models of the phone 12GB and 32GB and will cost $199 and $299 respectively.

Hold on to your seats folks!





Apr 09

Multiple Dropbox accounts on the same machine

Posted by: Michael Alfaro




Are you a dropbox user with a personal account and work account, but would love to use them both at the same time?  Here’s your solution for mac, and for the PC, they have Dropboxen which gives you the access through an add-on.

“Description

Dropboxen enables you to run multiple Dropbox clients concurrently by automatically launching multiple instances of Dropbox.exe as different Windows users so Dropbox will store the shared files in each unique Windows user directory.”





Apr 08

Apple’s iPhone OS 4.0 Update Will Enable Multitasking

Posted by: Derrick Larane

Today, at Apple’s Cupertino headquarters, Mr. Jobs introduced Apple’s iPhone new OS 4.0 to media members and other fortunate guests. And well it looks this update is another doozy.

If you recall, in the not-so-distant past the OS 3.0 update gave us: Cut, Copy & Paste, a Landscape Keyboard, MMS, Spotlight Search and some other updates and features. The 4.0 update looks to up the ante quite a bit. Along with enabling multitasking and background processing there are a number of user experience updates that will certainly add to the many reasons why the iPhone is really and truly a smart phone.

For more details on iPhone’s 4.0 updates click on the source link: http://www.macrumors.com/





Mar 27

iPhone App Gets Around AT&T

Posted by: Derrick Larane

So there’s finally an app that allows you to get around AT&T. It’s called Line2 . It’s only a dollar for the app.  It works over WIFI and gives you another line to make and receive calls right on your iPhone or iTouch.  There is a $15 monthly charge after the trial period.

Could this be a game changer or just a provoker. Take a read through the entire article below and make your own judgement call.

IPhone App to Sidestep AT&T

For a little $1 iPhone app, Line2 sure has the potential to shake up an entire industry.

It can save you money. It can make calls where AT&T‘s  signal is weak, like indoors. It can turn an iPod Touch into a full-blown cellphone.

And it can ruin the sleep of cellphone executives everywhere.

Line2 gives your iPhone a second phone number — a second phone line, complete with its own contacts list, voice mail, and so on. The company behind it, Toktumi (get it?), imagines that you’ll distribute the Line2 number to business contacts, and your regular iPhone number to friends and family. Your second line can be an 800 number, if you wish, or you can transfer an existing number.

To that end, Toktumi offers, on its Web site, a raft of Google (GOOG) Voice-ish features that are intended to help a small businesses look bigger: call screening, Do Not Disturb hours and voice mail messages sent to you as e-mail. You can create an “automated attendant” — “Press 1 for sales,” “Press 2 for accounting,” and so on — that routes incoming calls to other phone numbers. Or, if you’re pretending to be a bigger business than you are, route them all to yourself.

The Line2 app is a carbon copy, a visual clone, of the iPhone’s own phone software. The dialing pad, your iPhone Contacts list, your recent calls list and visual voice mail all look just like the iPhone’s.

(Let’s pause for a moment here to blink, dumbfounded, at that point. Apple‘s (AAPL) rules prohibit App Store programs that look or work too much like the iPhone’s own built-in apps. For example, Apple rejected the Google Voice app because, as Apple explained to the Federal Communications Commission, it works “by replacing the iPhone’s core mobile telephone functionality and Apple user interface with its own user interface for telephone calls.” That is exactly what Line2 does. Oh well — the Jobs works in mysterious ways.)

So you have a second line on your iPhone. But that’s not the best part.

Line2 also turns the iPhone into a dual-mode phone. That is, it can make and receive calls either using either the AT&T airwaves as usual, or — now this is the best part — over the Internet. Any time you’re in a wireless hot spot, Line2 places its calls over Wi-Fi instead of AT&T’s network.

That’s a game-changer. Where, after all, is cellphone reception generally the worst? Right — indoors. In your house or your office building, precisely where you have Wi-Fi. Line2 in Wi-Fi means rock-solid, confident reception indoors.

Line2 also runs on the iPod Touch. When you’re in a Wi-Fi hot spot, your Touch is now a full-blown cellphone, and you don’t owe AT&T a penny.

But wait, there’s more.

Turns out Wi-Fi calls don’t use up any AT&T minutes. You can talk all day long, without ever worrying about going over your monthly allotment of minutes. Wi-Fi calls are free forever.

Well, not quite free; Line2 service costs $15 a month (after a 30-day free trial).

But here’s one of those cases where spending more could save you money. If you’re in a Wi-Fi hot spot most of the time (at work, for example), that’s an awful lot of calling you can do in Wi-Fi — probably enough to downgrade your AT&T plan to one that gives you fewer minutes. If you’re on the 900-minute or unlimited plan ($90 or $100 a month), for example, you might be able to get away with the 450-minute plan ($70). Even with Line2′s fee, you’re saving $5 or $15 a month.

Line2 also lets you call overseas phone numbers for Skype-like rates: 2 to 5 cents a minute to most countries. (A full table of rates is available at toktumi.com.) As a handy globetrotters’ bonus, calls home to numbers in the United States from overseas hot spots are free.

All of these benefits come to you when you’re in a Wi-Fi hot spot, because your calls are carried by the Internet instead of by AT&T. Interestingly enough, though, Line2 can also make Internet calls even when you’re not in a hot spot.

It can, at your option, place calls over AT&T’s 3G data network, where it’s available. Every iPhone plan includes unlimited use of this 3G network — it’s how your iPhone sends e-mail and surfs the Web. So once again, Line2 calls don’t use up any of your monthly voice minutes.

Unfortunately, voice connections on the 3G network aren’t as strong and reliable as the voice or Wi-Fi methods. Cellular data networks aren’t made for seamless handoffs from cell tower to tower as you drive, for example — there’s not much need for it if you’re just doing e-mail and Web — so dropped calls are more likely. Fortunately, if you’re on a 3G data-network call and you walk into a hot spot, Line2 switches to the more reliable Wi-Fi network seamlessly, in midcall.

Whenever you do have an Internet connection — either Wi-Fi or a strong 3G area — you’re in for a startling treat. If you and your calling partner are both Line2 subscribers, Line2 kicks you into superhigh audio-quality mode (16-bit mode, as the techies call it).

Your calling partners sound as if they’re speaking right into the mike at an FM radio station. It’s almost too clear; you hear the other person’s breathing, lip smacks, clothing rustling and so on. After years of suffering through awful cellphone audio, it’s quite a revelation to hear what you’ve been missing.

Now, this all sounds wonderful, and Line2 generally is wonderful. But there’s room for improvement.

First, as you’ve no doubt already concluded, understanding Line2 is complicated. You have three different ways to make calls, each with pros and cons.

You miss a certain degree of refinement, too. The dialing pad doesn’t make touch-tone sounds as you tap the keys. There’s no Favorites list within the Line2 app. You can’t get or send text messages on your Line2 line. (The company says it will fix all this soon.)

There’s a faint hiss on Line2 calls, as if you’re on a long-distance call in 1970. The company says that it deliberately introduces this “comfort noise” to reassure you that you’re still connected, but it’s unnecessary. And sometimes there’s a voice delay of a half-second or so (of course, you sometimes get that on regular cellphone calls, too).

Finally, a note about incoming calls. If the Line2 app is open at the time, you’re connected via Wi-Fi, if available. If it’s not running, the call comes in through AT&T, so you lose the benefits of Wi-Fi calling. In short, until Apple blesses the iPhone with multitasking software, you have to leave Line2 open whenever you put the phone to sleep. That’s awkward.

Still, Line2 is the first app that can receive incoming calls via either Wi-Fi or cellular voice, so you get the call even if the app isn’t running. That’s one of several advantages that distinguish it from other voice-over-Internet apps like Skype and TruPhone.

Another example: If you’re on a Wi-Fi call using those other programs, and someone calls your regular iPhone number, your first call is unceremoniously disconnected. Line2, on the other hand, offers you the chance to decline the incoming call without losing your Wi-Fi call.

Those rival apps also lack Line2′s call-management features, visual voice mail and conference calling with up to 20 other people. And Line2 is the only app that gives you a choice of call methods for incoming and outgoing calls.

All of this should rattle cell industry executives, because let’s face it: the Internet tends to make things free. Cell carriers go through life hoping nobody notices the cellephant in the room: that once everybody starts making free calls over the Internet, it’s Game Over for the dollars-for-minutes model.

Line2, however, brings us one big step closer to that very future. It’s going to be a wild ride.

***

Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/family-home/article/109173/iphone-app-to-sidestep-att





Mar 18

Another interesting patent from Apple called iGroups

Posted by: Derrick Larane

I am always intrigued by Apple’s patent entries.  Most of them don’t see the light of day but at least its one doorway into the creative minds of a smart progressive company.  Enjoy to the article!!!

Patently Apple points to a patent application from Apple published today addressing technology to allow users at large events such as concerts, tradeshows, and rallies to utilize their mobile devices to automatically create social networking groups by exchanging “tokens” using such wireless technologies as Bluetooth and Wi-Fi.

The patent application, which was filed in September 2008, describes an example of the technology involving Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference, specifically using an “iGroups” application on the iPhone to demonstrate the process by which attendees could invite one another to a group and access information related to group discussion and activities on their devices.

A similar example shows how concert attendees could set their mobile devices to participate in the formation of a group at the event.

In this example scenario, a number of attendees of a rock concert set their Bluetooth-enabled devices to Token Exchange mode. All devices within transmission range of each other at the concert and that are set in Token Exchange mode begin exchanging and storing tokens. These devices are collectively referred to as a Group, and the users associated with devices in the Group are referred to as Group members. The Token Exchange is referred to as a “contact event.” The contact event can be associated with a “contact time” defined by timestamps provided to the trusted service.

Groups created using the method could then utilize functionalities such as e-mail and calendaring applications to interact with each other. The specific “rock concert” example poses a situation in which the musicians on-stage could initiate a group, linking to attendees near the front of the audience. The technology could also “daisy chain” to allow those further back in the crowd to still join the group via attendees further forward even if out of range of the musicians.

Source: http://www.macrumors.com/





Oct 21

Hi, I’m Diego’s iPhone and I’ve been through a washing machine

Posted by: Pinaki Kathiari

photo.jpg

So Mr. Diego washed his iPhone in the washer. Left it in there overnight. And when realized, he placed it in a bag of rice for 3 days.

Low and behold, it works!



Tags:


Oct 19

Droid Cometh

Posted by: David Spira

The first real challenger to the iPhone looks like it will be Droid. I haven’t read anything but great stuff coming from the people who have seen the über smart.

It has an iPhone look complete with touch screen, but it also has a slide out QWERTY keyboard (WIN)

It has an iPhone look complete with touch screen, but it also has a slide out QWERTY keyboard (WIN)

The device is made by Motorola; powered by Google’s mobile operating system, Android; and it will be sold through Verizon, thus it will be on Verizon’s awesome network.

Droid will run the latest version of Android, which looks incredible (see The Boy Genius’s write-up).

If the hardware reports are true, then Droid will have the same processor core as the iPhone, making it far more powerful than previous Android phones (Engadget).

Google CEO Eric Schmidt is decrying Android’s imminent explosion in the marketplace, while analysts’ are talking about Android’s potential for market domination by 2012.

Verizon is also going all out with their marketing. In the lead up to the announcement of Droid, they have been bashing AT&T’s flimsy network with their cleaver, “There’s a map for that” ads.

Then their Droid announcement ad launched a flurry of attacks on the iPhone’s limitations.

“The Droid poses a different and more significant challenge to the iPhone than any other phone to date. The Palm Pre could have been that challenger, but it lacked the Verizon network, and users were unimpressed with the hardware. According to people who’ve handled the device, the Droid is the most sophisticated mobile device to hit the market to date from a hardware standpoint. When you combine that with the Verizon network, you’ve got something that is most definitely a challenger to the Jesus phone” (TechCrunch).

If Droid is everything that Motorola, Google, Verizon, and the tech writers are claiming it should be incredibly exciting (The claims are pretty much confirmed). Better still, Droid should be available within a few weeks.

Pay close attention to the oddly placed umlaut under the "r"

Pay close attention to the oddly placed umlaut under the "r"

It’s clear to me that Droid means business because it has an unnecessary umlaut in its name.

~ syndicated by TheGeekWhisperer.com