Archive | June, 2010

Many thanks to our Sponsors

June 18, 2010

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Macgasm takes a lot of resources to run. Outside of all of the time and effort our contributors put into it, it also costs money to keep the site up and running. Due to these costs, we need advertising to bring you the content you deserve.

The Mac Sale

The Mac Sale was founded by The Escapers. We want to not only create great Mac software, but give a great deal to other developers looking to offer their ‘wares to the Mac community.” Keep an eye on The Mac Sale for great new things coming all of the time. They really are the best in town. You’ll save some serious cash on great apps.

CleanMyMac

CleanMyMac represents sophisticated all-in-one-suite utility that helps keep your Mac clean and healthy. With just two simple clicks you can delete useless files that basically pile up and waste your valuable disk space. CleanMyMac allows enjoying smooth system performance combining such vital features as Slim Universal Binaries, Clean Unneeded Languages, Logs Rotation, Clean Caches, Quick and Secure Erase, Application Uninstallation, and Killing Trash Left From Buried Applications. CleanMyMac can save gigabytes of disk space and enhance your computer speed. Go ahead and give it a shot! Your Mac will definitely be grateful!”

PodWorks

ImTOO Podworks is the ultimate iTunes alternative – Transfer iPod music, photos, and videos from iPod to Mac or iTunes. It also will transfer unsupported video and audio files (such as AVI, MPEG, WMV, WMA), backup music from iPod to your Mac, manage several iPods at the same time and transfer from iPod to iPod! ImTOO Podworks is the answer to all your ripping, copying, converting and transferring problems!”

These fine companies support us, so you should support them. If it wasn’t for their vote of confidence, we wouldn’t be here. Thanks to them, and thanks to you.

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5 tips for people who want an app reviewed

June 18, 2010

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Drama, gotta love it. Our buddies over at Just Another iPad Blog have been getting some heat about not reviewing a particular iPad application. So, we’ve decided that we’re going to support them a little bit, and write up an article on the things developers can do to increase the likelihood that their application will get reviewed. I say “increase the likelihood” because we can’t guarantee that everything that passes through our inbox will get reviewed.

In case you haven’t heard, there’s like a bazillion iPhone and iPad application on the market, and another bazillion OS X applications. It kind of makes it hard to keep up sometimes when your team has ten reviewers, all generous enough to donate their time to review applications.

Be concise and be clear—what’s your app do?

The pitch is key, and if you’re going to waste our time with a 200 word introduction to your application, there’s a good chance that we’re going to be moving on before we get to the good parts. Treat pitch emails like you treat tweets, keep it short, keep it on topic, and keep the fluff out. Chances are, if you tell us exactly what your app does, how much it costs, and provide a link for us, we’ll probably check it out.

Do not provide us with your PR copy, unless we’ve signed up for it, and please don’t go all Charles Dickens on us in the emails that you do send. There’s a very good chance that most of us do these app reviews as a hobby or side project, so please, don’t make us feel like we’re working.

Email reviewers one time, and don’t spam us for updates

If you want to pitch us, by all means, we’re excited to hear about what you’ve done. We genuinely want to tell people about excellent applications that we think might be a fit for our audience. But, keep in mind that it’s about our audience, and we’re catering to them, so they dictate what we review and what we don’t. It’s the nature of the beast. If we don’t think your application is something our readers would like to know about, we probably won’t share it. It’s not a slight on you, or your application, we just don’t think it’d be much help telling our readers about it. If they’re not going to appreciate it, they’re not going to click through and purchase your application, so in short, we’d be wasting our time.

There’s a number of reasons why we don’t review your applications (Outside of the one listed above). Sometimes we just don’t think the application is very good, so we take the high road and move on. Emailing us every twelve hours, or writing snarky posts about us not reviewing your application is only going to encourage us to write an honest review, which is these cases would be negative.

You don’t want that.

Attach a coupon code, or gift us the app

People who review apps sink a lot of time and money into the AppStore. We don’t expect handouts all of the time, but you’re certainly going to make our lives easier if you attach a coupon code, or gift us the app to review. Some would argue that this is “unethical”, but as we see it, we can’t buy every single application on the planet. We’ll gladly pay for things that interest us, but if you’re contacting us to review your application, you’re going to want to make sure we can get your application.

That being said, “gifting an application,” or sending a “coupon code” will not guarantee a positive review, so don’t expect one. We’re going to be honest, which brings me to my next point.

If there’s bugs, we’re going to find them, and then we’ll mention them

I never understood why someone would send a faulty product, or a bug ridden application to a reviewer. We’ll notice that the application is broken, or that an iPad case is falling apart. But, we’re going to mention it, publicly. So, if your application is half baked in the oven, don’t take it out and serve it to us. You’d be better off sitting on it for a couple more versions, and working the kinks out.

We’re not spiteful, and we get that the occasional bug might popup undetected before you send out the program, but if your application barely works as advertised, take our word for it, you don’t want us reviewing it.

We’re just as excited as you are

We love to review applications, and we’re as passionate about this market space as you are so keep that in mind when you’re interacting with us. We’d love to be able to review your application immediately, but there’s a good chance that we have a super long list of applications to review. We’ll get to as soon as we can. We have a vested interest in doing it, so have some patience, and a little faith. It’ll get reviewed eventually.

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Marvel gives away a free comic every week

June 18, 2010

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We’ve checked out the Marvel application on the iPad, and the glorified e-reader disappointed us a little. We were secretly hoping that Marvel was going to release a new comic on launch day, in the same vein as Wired did with their magazine application. We were hoping for something ground breaking, but instead we got a gussied-up PDF. We’re okay with that, we just had to readjust our expectations a little bit.

What is cool about the Marvel application is that once a week they give readers a free comic book from their archive. While it’s not similar to a big screen adaption of a Frank Miller graphic novel, it is a free comic book, and who can say no to a free comic once a week. So, until we see a revolutionary spin on the traditional comic book, we’re just gonna have to be content with what we get.

Article Via Apps&Hats

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Macgasm on the Web

June 18, 2010

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If you’re a fan of Macgasm, you might be interested in checking out our presence on a myriad of social platforms. You can always visit our website or read our Feed, but these method are a bit more interactive.

Facebook

Macgasm on Facebook
Our Facebook page features our very best articles as well as commentary from the writers and readers. This is a great way to get the highlights of Macgasm into your news feed.

Twitter


Josh put together a Twitter List of all of the Macgasm writers. If you want to read the thoughts of the best group of nerds on Twitter, this is where you want to start. If you’d like to browse each and every member, you can check out the member list.

YouTube


If you prefer video over text, you can find original Macgasm content on our YouTube channel. If you’re not a fan of flash, you might prefer viewing these videos in h.264 with YouTube5.

These are the best places to catch updates from the Macgasm team across the web. If you’d like to see us on a platform that we’re not already a part of, please drop us a note in the comments… Or anywhere on the net you’d like.

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There’s a new MobileMe layout

June 18, 2010

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During the wee hours of the night, Apple Inc. was working hard at updating MobileMe, and bringing MobileMe out of beta. Previously, only certain MobileMe members had access to the new layout, but now everyone can access the sleek looking web mail interface.

What’s new in this version?

Widescreen and compact views, mail rules, single click archiving, support for external email addresses, and improved junk mail filtering.

The idea of being able to import all your Google Apps accounts into MobileMe is pretty enticing. We were secretly hoping that this update would have brought along with an updated pricing scheme along the lines of the rumored “free” we’ve all been hearing about. Unfortunately it didn’t, maybe we’ll see it at the same time as the streaming iTunes service. Or, never. Either way, MobileMe just took a small step forward today.

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jQTouch now Sencha – Mobile web app development

June 18, 2010

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Those familiar with iPhone/iTouch optimized websites might have heard of or seen a jQTouch site. Created by David Kaneda, it was the first and only jquery-based mobile web toolkit to make mobile sites have the same look and feel as native iPhone apps.

A new trend in native apps was to create a mobile web app and use Phonegap to be the native wrapper and submit it to the AppStore. Several apps such as Keypoint , Harmonious , and Beer in Japan are based on jQTouch.

Recently David Kaneda has joined the Ext JS company, and they have renamed the company Sencha and have Sencha Touch, the first HTML5 Mobile App Framework for iOS and Android.

They have three full featured demos, GeoCongress, Solitaire and Kiva, which look outstanding and function very well on my iPhone 3GS and scale perfectly for the iPad.

The assumption is that these apps will still be able to be wrapped up by PhoneGap to produce native apps to submit on the AppStore and Android Marketplace.  While the framework is still in beta, there is no commerical license yet.  There is an open source license, so all web apps and web apps wrapped in a native wrapper must be compatible with the GNU GPL license v3.

As the battle between smartphones continue we will see some fail (ahem, Palm webOS) and some team together to corner the market (currently iPhones and Android – 90% of market). However, no one wants to create multiple versions of their site or application. The universal app across different mobile operating systems is the ultimate goal and one step closer thanks to Sencha.

Key features:

  • Flexible Themes
  • Resolution Independent
  • Animations (Slide, Fade, Cube, etc.)
  • Touch Events – swipe, double tap, tap, etc.
  • Standards Based (HTML5, CSS3, Javascript)
  • Data Integration (JSON, AJAX, YQL)

Below are some screenshots of some examples if you download Sencha.

My prediction is you will see a lot of webapps and even native apps starting to use this framework as it speeds up development time and breaks Apple’s developer strangle-hold!

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Is Apple going to release a CDMA iPhone?

June 18, 2010

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For quite some time now the Verizon iPhone rumor has been going around the blogosphere. As of recently, even Verizon has said that they are not going to carry the iPhone. With that said, the Verizon iPhone rumor mill is at full speed with the latest rumor that a Chinese company has received orders from Apple to make a CDMA iPhone.

Cult of Mac’s Ed Sutherland reports on this:

““Pegatron will also start shipping a CDMA version of the iPhone 4 to Apple in the fourth quarter and is currently using its plants in Shanghai, China to produce the products,” DigiTimes reports, citing unnamed sources. In May, DigiTimes reported the company had been awarded the CDMA contract.”

If this is in fact accurate, it would be a shift in Apple’s product cycle. Personally I don’t see this happening, but for argument’s sake let’s say that it is true. Does this mean that Apple considers the CDMA iPhone to be a separate product in their iOS line of products?  Or, does this mean, as Sutherland points out in his piece, that “…an Apple CDMA handset is destined for markets outside of the U.S., such as Japan or China”?

I would have to go with the latter of the two above statements. Apple has different product  cycles for outside of the U.S., so it would stand to reason that the CDMA iPhone would launch later this year in the fourth quarter outside of the U.S..

Moreover, for those that are holding out for the iPhone to move to Verizon, myself included, I’ll explain in a moment why I would tell them to take this news with a grain of salt. As I stated earlier, it is highly unlikely that Apple is going to break their product cycle. With that said, I would welcome a Verizon iPhone to the market. After this past Tuesday’s iPhone 4 ordering debacle, it would be great to see the iPhone on another carrier other than AT&T. It would definitely balance the load. Let’s face it, AT&T seems either inept or simply unable to improve on their network.

Photo Credit: CDMA Edition iPhone

Article Via Cult of Mac

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JooJoo can run a full version of OS X, allegedly

June 18, 2010

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Remember the JooJoo? Yeah, we barely do too, but perhaps you remember it by its original name, CrunchPad. This $499 device that’s apparently sold 90 units, pales in comparison to the iPad, at least in our opinion, but things could be looking up for the device in a hurry if the claims are true—the JooJoo has been hacked to run a full version of OS X.

The news, taken from the JooJoo forum, could be bunk, but we have no way to verify that this creation story is legitimate, outside of the three pictures they’ve posted. There’s also some cryptic install notes that read more like a For Dummies book than a hack manual, but who are we to judge this ten step process.

From the Forum,

  1. install osx from your current install to a spare usb drive.
  2. use monolingual and xslimmer and trim the shit out of the install
  3. use diskutil to shrink that partition to 3.7Gb or smaller if possible
  4. make a bootcd. (or get one)
  5. boot the bootcd
  6. swap bootcd and boot retail disk
  7. once in installer, use diskutility to format ssd to guid
  8. use the restore function to copy the usb shrunken install to native ssd
  9. reboot w/ boot disk but select native install
  10. install proper bootloader.

So what do you think, fact or fiction? If it’s true, would you rethink your iPad purchase and possibly pick up a JooJoo to run a full version of OS X? No? We wouldn’t either.

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