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April 11th, 2008

You are currently browsing the articles from iPhone nano - Apple iPhone Articles written on April 11th, 2008.

Use your iPhone to blog on the go - Native WordPress and TypePad applications coming to iPhone soon

Wordpress and TypePad coming to iPhone with native applicationsIf blogging is your thing, and you like to actually get out from behind your desk every once in a while (apparently there's a whole real-life world out there, I have no idea what it is but I've heard of it), mobile blogging is your best bet. And, the iPhone's gorgeously huge multi-touch display combined with the bad-ass Safari browser is the perfect platform from which to blog on the go.

I make it a point to take my blogging to the road and actually make a few posts with my iPhone. I can't type as fast on the iPhone's on-screen keyboard as I can with my laptop keyboard, but that's expected. I can, however, type faster on the iPhone than on any physical mobile phone keyboard I've ever used (and I've used my fair share).

So, it's good to hear that mobile blogging tools are about to hit the iPhone. WordPress is apparently going to hit the iPhone very soon - perhaps with the launch of the AppStore. Matt Mullenwag, head honcho at WordPress, will only admit that there is a mobile device that has a WordPress client "built in," and that "you can probably guess which one that is" - but we'll take that as confirmation that WordPress is coming to the iPhone.

Six Apart, not one to man the sidelines, will also be throwing a native TypePad blogging application into the fray. ?Six Apart pioneered the mobile blogging experience with an iPhone-optimized blog service,? said Chris Alden, CEO, Six Apart. ?We?re taking it to the next level with our native iPhone application for TypePad that?s already in development.?

The native third-party applications do away with the need to blog through a web interface, and will no doubt offer the benefits of speed and offline blogging to iPhone die-hards. Until these WordPress and TypePad application hit the market, you might do well to check out this WordPress plug-in (WPhone) that optimizes the WordPress interface for your iPhone (read: it's EDGE-friendly). I personally would rather use the full WordPress interface, but I only use it in conjunction with a WiFi connection.

Check out this video. It's long. Fast forward to 51:00.

WPhone

[Via: MacWorld]


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Written by iPod News admin on April 11th, 2008 with no comments.
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iChabber brings Jabber, GTalk instant messaging to iPhone

iChabber

iPhone users that are at the same time GTalk and/or Jabber fans — or at least have friends that use the mentioned instant messaging clients/services — here's a piece of good news for you. Thanks to the application called iChabber you can now chat with your GTalk/Jabber buddies on your shiny handset, natively. Sure, you can use some of the web-based solutions, and that's fine. But honestly I think native is the way to go when it comes to mobile instant messaging clients.

While the application is still far from being completed — there are some usability issues which can get really annoying — the good thing is that iChabber runs in the background allowing you to be in the loop as long as you stay logged in. That's cool and I guess that will also be the case with Apple's IM client once it's released alongside firmware 2.0 in June.

In the meantime, you can download iChabber from here or install it from iSpazio repo in Installer.app.

[Via: BoyGeniusReport]


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Written by iPod News admin on April 11th, 2008 with no comments.
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Software could trip up Nokia?s iPhone rival

First Nokia touchscreen phone could be a disappointment, analysts warn

LONDON (MarketWatch) — Details of Nokia Corp.’s upcoming riposte to Apple Inc.’s iPhone are beginning to emerge, but analysts cautioned that while the touch-screen gadget is bound to look snazzy, its operating system could disappoint.

Nokia Corp. , the world’s largest maker of mobile phones, has made it no secret over the past few months that it’s working on a high-end phone with touch-screen technology to fight back Apple’s foray onto its home turf.

The first hints of such a device came months ago but there are now signs that an official announcement could be imminent.

Nokia this week teased industry observers with a slide showing the phone, code-named the “tube,” at the Evans Data Developer Conference in Redwood City, Calif.
Yet a Nokia spokesman declined to give a precise date for the launch, only saying it would happen in the second half of the year. He added that Nokia doesn’t comment on the potential specifications of upcoming handsets.

Industry observers had been patient, stressing how important it is for Nokia to get it right and not risk disappointing fans with a half-baked device that wouldn’t stand the comparison with the game-changing iPhone.

“The iPhone had a seismic impact on the industry,” said Ben Wood, an analyst at U.K. telecoms consultancy CSS Insight. “From the day it was released, every other phone out there became disappointing,” he said. “Unless Nokia’s product is amazingly good, they’d better not come out with anything.”

As the months pass, however, pressure is building up on the Finnish maker to unveil its iPhone competitor before Apple launches a third-generation (3G) version of the popular gadget.

“In the long term Nokia definitely needs a touch-screen portfolio. Apple has raised
the bar and Nokia needs to react,” said Neil Mawston, research director in the mobile device practice of research firm Strategy Analytics.

He added Nokia is likely taking its time because of its “obsession with reliability and durability.”

Software may be ‘disappointment’

When Nokia’s first touch-screen phone eventually comes out, looks will be important, but software is what could make the difference between success and failure.

Richard Windsor, of Nomura International, said that when he tested the latest version of the S60 operating system, understood to be the software the Nokia touch phone will run on, he was “deeply unimpressed.”

He warned that unless there is a “meaningful improvement” to the user experience before the phone is launched, it could fail to catch on and become profitable.
“While the device looks great, we think that the software that runs it could easily end up being a massive disappointment,” he said.

Carolina Milanesi, research director in the mobile device practice of Gartner, also had doubts. She believes the S60 operating system will only allow users to use one finger at a time when giving commands on the touch screen. In comparison, the iPhone’s interface is “multi touch,” meaning it can respond to the use of several digits simultaneously. That feature allows iPhone users to expand or shrink a photo by pinching its frame between two fingers, for instance.

That capability likely won’t be possible on Nokia’s device, and the maker “will need to come up with something to make up for this shortfall,” Milanesi said.
Other analysts also predicted a difficult start for Nokia’s first direct response to the iPhone.

“Apple has set the bar so high that any competing device will almost inevitably fail at its first attempt,” CSS Insight’s Wood said.

But even if Nokia’s first device in the touch-screen segment is a flop, there’s a good chance it can eventually develop a serious rival.

Wood noted that Samsung, now the number-two maker of mobile phones, has showed that it’s possible to quickly improve on the first version of a touch-screen product.
The South Korean maker has released at least five touch-screen phones, including the Instinct, since the iPhone was first unveiled.

And the iPhone has its vulnerabilities.

Nokia could beat iPhone on text messaging

Perhaps the biggest opportunity is in text messaging, said Strategy Analytics’ Mawston.

“I think if Nokia can crack the messaging on their contender to the iPhone, they stand a good chance at differentiating themselves,” he said.

Text messaging is particularly popular in Europe as a way for teenagers to communicate, and it’s also catching on in the U.S.

Mawston believes Nokia is likely to release just one phone initially and then gradually build a family, which could be called the T-series. He stressed that Nokia’s goal is different from Apple’s because the Finnish firm would never be satisfied with selling just 10 million phones.

They would want to sell many more to leverage economies of scale, he said.
By comparison, Nokia in 2007 sold 38 million devices from its high-end N series.
Nokia is scheduled to report first-quarter results next Thursday.

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Written by iPod News admin on April 11th, 2008 with no comments.
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Nike+ coming to iPhone, iPod touch

Nike plans to expand its Nike+ program to include the iPhone and iPod touch, according to a new report.

Stuff.tv, visiting Nike’s headquarters in Oregon, said a Nike+ spokesperson confirmed the expansion, adding that it could also make use of the devices’ Wi-Fi capabilities (and possibly the iPhone’s upcoming 3G connection) to allow users to update their training log on the fly, without the need for docking with a computer.

This news follows a set of recently published Apple patent applications, which outlined a digital fitness program for iTunes and touchscreen digital media devices.

Written by santhosh on April 11th, 2008 with no comments.
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LifeRecord EMR v4.0 Includes iPhone Functionality, Costs $9999

Life Record has announced the release of Life Record EMR v4.0, the next version of their web-based Electronic Medical Record software. Life Record EMR acts as an electronic system with which doctors can organize their medical profession. The software features in-lobby enrollment, iPhone messaging, and the ability to prescribe medications electronically.


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Written by Edward Kirk on April 11th, 2008 with no comments.
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