Procurando uma maneira seguir fàcilmente a informação retornando goste de despesas ou de milhagem aproveitarando o poder awesome de seu iPhone? Um leitor sobre em nosso local da irmã, ósmio X do Mac sugere, pode ter apenas a coisa para você. Usando Google Docs rolado recentemente para fora examine a característica, você pode rapidamente criar uma correia fotorreceptora simples app para seu próprio uso pessoal.
Tudo que você tem que fazer é criar um spreadsheet para o que informação você queira seguir, e faz então um formulário para ele que usa a característica da parte de Google Docs. Você começará um invitation do email com uma ligação ao formulário que você criou; abra isso no Safari e bookmark o (ou o heck, o adicione a sua tela Home), e você terá o acesso fácil a sua própria correia fotorreceptora pessoal app. Embora você pode somente ver e não editar o spreadsheet em seu iPhone diretamente, você pode sempre alcançá-lo de um computador mais tarde, se você necessitar crunch alguns números.
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Escrito por Dan Moren sobre Fevereiro 18o, 2008 com nenhuns comentários.
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Se você fosse um colaborador do Mac que olha para a frente à liberação do jogo do desenvolvimento do software do iPhone com um glee reservado geralmente por manhãs do Christmas, então você pôde querer moderar esse entusiasmo apenas a pequenino bocado. Tornar-se para o iPhone, porque gira para fora, não será completamente como tornar-se para o Mac, embora compartilham de algumas similaridades subjacentes.
Faça exame d de um quem sabe: a saber, programador Craig Hockenberry de Iconfactory, companheiro responsável para Twitterrific. Craig penned alguns pensamentos em o que é como se tornar para o iphone, dado sua experiência que tenta cortar para fora uma versão nativa de Twitterrific.
Não espere reúso muito de seu código existente. Se você se estiver usando um projeto MVC padrão (que é muito inescapable bonito se você estiver usando a cacau) então sobre 2/3rds da aplicação requererá o rework principal.
De minha experiência, seus modelos e o infrastructure que os suportam podem reúso sem muito esforço. On the other hand, the multi-touch interface obviates the need for your existing views and controllers.
Heed his words, children! He knows wherefore of he speaks. It's a worthwhile read for anybody who's interested in developing for the iPhone. Which, come on, is
all of you.
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Written by Dan Moren on February 14th, 2008 with no comments.
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Those of us who've been using Mobile Safari for any length of time have dealt with this not infrequent frustration. There you are, reading a news article on the latest celebrity break-ups the upcoming election, but you're about to head onto the subway/get on a plane/enter a dead spot. Sometimes the page will stay loaded, and you're fine—but sometimes, Safari decides, for no apparent reason, to unload the page.
That's where iWebSaver comes in. This website will take any URL you give it and convert it into data that can be stored locally on the iPhone as a bookmarklet. Once iWebSaver converts the site, you just add it as a bookmark. When you hit that link later, it'll load up for you. iWebSaver even provides a handy bookmarklet that simplifies the process down to just a couple of taps.
I found that bigger, more complex pages, caused Safari to quit when it tried to load the converted, so your best bet is using this on simple pages—I'd recommend using print-ready versions if the site offers them.
Copyright Mac Publishing LLC. This RSS feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you're not reading this material in your news aggregator, the site you're looking at is guilty of copyright infringement. Please contact webmaster@macworld.com so we can take legal action immediately.

Written by Dan Moren on February 13th, 2008 with no comments.
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Update Tuesday, and sure enough, we did get one. It just wasn’t the one that we expected. This new version of Aperture sees more than 100 new features added to the popular photo management and manipulation software.
Aperture has long been the program of choice for photo professionals due to its power and integration with the Mac operating system- which is already chosen by most media and graphic designers.
Aperture 2 straps on a new engine and user interface, with plenty of new tools for image editing. One notable new feature is the functionality to easily upload your whole portfolio to .mac, which can then be viewed on the web, iPod, iPhone and Apple TV.
This update can be purchased on the Apple store, for shipment in 1-3 days. If you recently purchased Aperture ‘1.5′, then you can upgrade for $10, as standard Apple policy. Further to this, owners of the original Aperture can upgrade for $100. Standard retail price is $200…
Written by Will on February 12th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on Software and mac and Apple and Aperture 2 and Photo and Aperture and Photo Editing.
Update Tuesday, and sure enough, we did get one. It just wasn’t the one that we expected. This new version of Aperture sees more than 100 new features added to the popular photo management and manipulation software.
Aperture has long been the program of choice for photo professionals due to its power and integration with the Mac operating system- which is already chosen by most media and graphic designers.
Aperture 2 straps on a new engine and user interface, with plenty of new tools for image editing. One notable new feature is the functionality to easily upload your whole portfolio to .mac, which can then be viewed on the web, iPod, iPhone and Apple TV.
This update can be purchased on the Apple store, for shipment in 1-3 days. If you recently purchased Aperture ‘1.5′, then you can upgrade for $10, as standard Apple policy. Further to this, owners of the original Aperture can upgrade for $100. Standard retail price is $200…
Written by Will on February 12th, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on Software and mac and Apple and Aperture 2 and Photo and Aperture and Photo Editing.
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