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Monday, February 7, 2011

Pulse News Previews Honeycomb App for Android Tablets [PICS]

Pulse News, by startup Alphonso Labs, has helped usher in a new way of consuming social news on mobile devices. A new Honeycomb version of the application was previewed for Android tablets in conjunction with Google’s press event Wednesday.

Alphonso Labs worked closely with Google to tap into the tablet operating system’s differentiating features including Activity Fragments (as described below), home screen widgets, notifications and accelerated graphics.

Here’s how Alphonso Labs describes the benefits of working with Honeycomb Activity Fragments: “Honeycomb allows developers to break the Activities of their applications into subcomponents called Fragments, and then combine them in a variety of ways to create a richer, more interactive experience. For the landscape view, Pulse allows you to open the story right there in a new fragment. This allows readers to simultaneously browse and read news stories.”

The home screen widgets are also handy. They offer users instant access to stories within Pulse, and the rich-content notifications that include images and news story headlines.

The Honeycomb application will be released later this month and include the standard Pulse fare that iPhone, iPad and Android users have already come to appreciate.

So, is the Honeycomb-optimized version of Pulse News superior to its iPad counterpart? “It’s comparable — calling it superior (just yet) would not be correct,” says Alphonso Labs co-founder Akshay Kothari. The “just yet” part has us wondering what the app makers have in store for future updates.

Check out the screenshots below for an early look at Pulse News for Honeycomb.


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Google Answers Our Prayers With Android Market Webstore

Google has just announced that the Android Market is now accessible via a standard web browser.

Putting the Market online, a la iTunes, answers one of our longest standing complaints against the Android Market and the Android app ecosystem as a whole.

In addition to being able to browse and purchase apps from the Android Market website, users can also install applications directly to their device, no cords required.

Google is also upping its currency offerings and improving currency seller support.

Updates coming…


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The Evolution Of Support Banners: A Quick Reference Guide

One…

From Wikipeda (2010-2011)

Two…

From Wikileaks (Now)

Three…

From Wickedleaks (Coming soon)

Sorry, I could not read the content fromt this page.

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The Daily iPad 'newspaper' launches, $.99 weekly or $39.99 per year


Introducing The Daily

First National Daily News Publication Created for iPad

Launches today in the AppleApp Store

New York, NY, February 2, 2011 – Today Rupert Murdoch, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of News Corporation, unveiled The Daily -- the industry's first national daily news publication created from the ground up for iPad.

"New times demand new journalism," said Mr. Murdoch. "So we built The Daily completely from scratch -- on the most innovative device to come about in my time -- the iPad."

"The magic of great newspapers -- and great blogs -- lies in their serendipity and surprise, and the touch of a good editor," continued Mr. Murdoch. "We're going to bring that magic to The Daily -- to inform people, to make them think, to help themengage in the great issues of the day. And as we continue to improve and evolve, we are going to use the best in new technology to push the boundaries of reporting."

The Daily's unique mix of text, photography, audio, video, information graphics, touch interactivity and real-time data and social feeds provides its editors with the ability to decide not only which stories are most important -- but also the best format to deliver these stories to their readers.

"News Corp. is redefining the news experience with The Daily," says Steve Jobs, Apple's CEO. "We think it is terrific and iPad users are really going to embrace it."

Led by Editor-in-Chief Jesse Angelo and Publisher Greg Clayman, The Daily is the first application made available on the App Store as a subscription -- which will be billed directly to an iTunes account. And because this paperless paper requires no multi-million dollar presses or delivery trucks, it will be priced at just 99 cents a week (or $39.99 for an annual subscription).

"The Daily launches at a moment when advances in technology are changing the job of the modern editor," says Mr. Angelo. "These advances are giving us new ways to tell stories. We intend to take advantage of all of them, and make The Daily the new voice for a new era."

Each day The Daily will publish up to 100 pages focused on six key areas: news, sports, gossip and celebrity, opinion, arts and life, and apps and games. It will offer views from across the political spectrum. They will come from across cultures and generations, across America and the world.

The Daily will feature Sudoku and crossword puzzles, localized weather reports, and a customizablesports package that captures news on the user's favorite teams. Subscribers will also be able to leave comments on Daily stories in either written or audio form -- as well as bookmark them in-app to read later.

As readers move through The Daily's content, they will be helped by several highly intuitive navigation tools. And while The Daily lives on the iPad, most of its articles can be easily shared via Facebook, Twitter and email. The Daily will link out to the web, as well as bring the web into the app.

"In short, says Mr. Murdoch, "we believe The Daily will be the model for how stories are told and consumed in this digital age."

The Daily has bureaus in New York and Los Angeles, as well as stringers across the country. Full company bios are available at TheDaily.com/about. Executive staff includes:

* John Kilpatrick - Executive Creative Director
* Steve Alperin - Managing Editor
* Mike Nizza - Managing Editor, News
* Richard Johnson - LA Bureau Chief
* Sasha Frere-Jones - Editor, Arts & Life
* Chris D'Amico - Editor, Sports
* Elisabeth Eaves - Editor, Opinion
* Peter Ha - Editor, Apps, Games and Technology

The Daily is also changing the way advertising is offered and consumed within a news publication. Full-page ad units are completely interactive, customizable, and offer a rich mix of branding and direct response opportunities. Launch advertisers include HBO,Macy's, Paramount, Pepsi Max, Range Rover, Verizon, and Virgin Atlantic Airways.

"With The Daily, Rupert Murdoch has given us the chance to rethink the entire experience of news delivery and consumption," said Mr. Clayman. "The ability to actively listen to and engage with our audience means we can continually provide an experiencethat consumers value in this fast-evolving tablet space. Together with our customers, our advertising partners, and the team at The Daily, we are excited to create a new form of media."

About The Daily

The Daily is a first-of-its-kind daily national news publication built exclusively as an application for tablet computing. It provides readers the engaging experience of a magazine combined with the immediacy of the web and the need-to-know content of a newspaper, all while elevating user experience beyond the printed word. The Daily is a subscription-based news product, published 365 days a year, at the cost of $0.99 cents a week or $39.99 a year. For more information on The Daily go to: www.thedaily.com.

News Corporation (NASDAQ: NWS, NWSA; ASX: NWS, NWSLV) had total assets as of September 30, 2010 of approximately US$56 billion and total annual revenues of approximately US$33 billion. News Corporation is a diversified global media company with operations in six industry segments: cable network programming; filmed entertainment; television; direct broadcast satellite television; publishing; and other. The activities of News Corporation are conducted principally in the United States, Continental Europe, the United Kingdom, Australia, Asia and Latin America.


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Sifteo Cubes get FCC teardown, not so cute anymore

By Christopher Trout posted Feb 2nd 2011 12:15PM Sifteo's cute little gaming Cubes have grown up a lot over the past couple of months: they've undergone two name changes (from Siftables to Cubits to Cubes), experienced the gaming rites of passage at CES, and now these 1.5-inch full-color computers are making their FCC debut, including the ritual teardown. The not-so-cute internal photos show one of the Cubes, guts exposed, revealing a 32-bit ARM processor. Also buried in the FCC documents is evidence that the darling devices communicate with computers via a 2.4GHz USB dongle and sport a three-axis motion sensor. Sifteo's already sold out of its first round of pre-orders, but we're guessing we'll be seeing more of the adorable little guys sometime real soon. web coverage

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YouTube & Flickr Offer On-the-Ground Look at Protests in Egypt

EgyptSince Internet access was restored Wednesday in Egypt, witnesses of the growing violence throughout the country have been able to share their photos and videos without using a work around.

Internet access in the country had been restricted after the government pressured Internet service providers to block Twitter, then Facebook, and then the entire Internet in response to protests against the presidency of Hosni Mubarak.

Before the Internet block was removed, people were using third-party apps and proxy servers to bypass these blocks, and grassroots communication about the protests continued on social networks like YouTube and Flickr.

New images of the protests have continued to flood into both of these networks now that Internet access has been restored. About 4,000 uploads are currently categorized under the Jan 25 Flickr tag, and YouTube has been working with real-time curation site Storyful to collect uploaded video of the protests in its Citizentube channel.

We’ve gathered a collection of the images from each of these channels, and you can view them in the galleries below.

Photos courtesy of Mahmoud Saber, Monasosh, Mashahed, Kodak Agfa

View As Slideshow » ???? ????? ?? ???? ?????????? ?????? ????? ????? ??????? Protest in Egypt - Jan 25, 2011Peaceful protest of few hundreds Egyptians on one of the main streets in Cairo in Jan 25, 2011 (Egyptian national holiday - Police day) Demonstrators gather in Tahrir Square ahead of million man marchCairo, Egypt: Demonstrators gather in Tahrir Square ahead of Tuesday's planned "Million Man March" against President Mubarak. (January 31, 2011) Things Mubarak Thugs are throwing on peaceful protestors in Tahrir SquareWe've been there for 1 week. Not one single injury, not one single person harmed. Now, the mubarak thugs are throwing this on protestors. For 50 Egyptian Pounds per person!!!!

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