Wednesday, 22 June 2011

New Apple patent, to share your info and chat with people nearby!!

Apple wants to assist you meeting new people Nearby -- by sharing what's on your iPhone. The company has filed a patent for a method of "ad hoc networking based on content and location" which, simply put, allows you to contact complete strangers nearby based on your shared interests and phone usage.

Apple wants to ease the awkwardness of meeting like-minded people in the real world, TUAW reports. Apparently, when away from the safety of your laptop and Facebook friend requests, you have to talk to people face to face to get to know them. A sobering thought.

However, this "often requires a substantial amount of and time and effort because identifying new persons with common interests for friendships is difficult," according to the application. Indeed, life isn't always played out at speed-dating pace and people don't walk around with 'Like' buttons grafted to them.

"When two strangers meet, it may take a long and awkward conversation to discover their common interests or experiences," Apple says. Yeah, we hate it when you have to put any effort into a conversation.

Apparently it's far better to sit down with your iPhone or iPad and use it like a radar, pinpointing other people in the vicinity who you might get along with.

Obviously, Apple doesn't want another privacy disaster on its hands, so users would have to opt in to share various tidbits of information about themselves. As well as filling in a few basic facts about their likes, dislikes and hobbies, the handset might also match people based on the music and photos stored on their phone and what places they've visited.

If you like listening to Rebecca Black, have taken lots of photos of black labradors, recently returned from a conference in Blackpool and pretend you have a black belt in karate, Apple's system may be able to find someone for you. Let's hope she doesn't look like the person in the patent drawing.

A previous Apple patent would allow existing contacts to find one another if they were in the same area. Services such as Foursquare and Facebook Places do a similar thing already and you don't have to own Apple gear to use it.

Would you appreciate it if technology helped you to get to know complete strangers, or are old-fashioned concepts like eye contact and talking still best at initiating contact?

Imagination Technologies forecasts 1bn in mobile chip income

Imagination Technologies, the company that designs microchips used in Apple’s iPad and iPhone, seems to have doubled their prediction towards mobile chip shipments. By 2016, this company expects more than 1bn shipped a year, way up from a previous forecast of 500m.

The company which is based in Hertfordshire UK,
specialised on designs the chips for the graphics that powers the display screens of smartphones and tablet computers, on Wednesday said the fact that 245m chips utilizing their blueprints have already been shipped in the year to the end of April.

Imagination falls despite upbeat forecast - Mar-16
Imagination buys Caustic in graphics chip push - Dec-14
Imagination to license chips to telecoms - Dec-14
Imagination chief urges UK to nurture IT - Oct-11
Imagination more than trebles profits - Jun-24
Apple raises Imagination Technologies stake - Jun-26

This is
nearly double the quantity previous year and also has prompted Imagination to revise sharply its medium-term forecasts.

“Our licensing pipeline is very strong so I think this is a reasonable goal,”
said Hossein Yassaie, chief executive. “When we set a 200m unit target in 2008 we were only shipping 10m units and a lot of analysts thought I was mad. But we have passed that now.”

Chips for mobile phones account for about 80 per cent of Imagination’s royalties, but Mr Yassaie said that television set-top boxes, tablet computers and cars were increasingly using the technology.

Revenues at the company increased 21 per cent to £98m, while pre-tax profits rose more than 60 per cent to £16.4m. Earnings per share were up 32 per cent at 7.4p.

Some analysts were disappointed, however, that the average royalties Imagination gets from each chip was only 27 cents compared with market expectations of 30 cents.

In spite of strong growth for smartphone and tablet sales, Imagination faces increasing competition from companies such as Qualcomm, Nvidia and Arm, which will keep royalty rates under pressure, said Adrien Bommelaer, analyst at Matrix Corporate Capital.

Imagination’s results were also held back by its unprofitable Pure Radio division, which makes DAB digital radios. Revenues at the unit fell 16 per cent to £28.2m and operating losses widened to £3.8m.

However, Mr Yassaie said he was not thinking of selling the Pure business, which he sees as a useful showcase for Imagination’s technology products.

Shares in Imagination, which have gained nearly 40 per cent over the past year, fell 18½p to 414½p on Wednesday.

Sunday, 19 June 2011

Will the iPhone 5 release on 7 September? Well lets see.

We've learned from CNET UK earwigged the rumours and even consulted their iPod Ouija board. After 16 hours of number-crunching on the CNET UK supercomputer, they came up with the most likely release date for the iPhone 5 -- 7 September 2011. Dont take this serious thos as is just predictions :).

Let's break down the facts, Poirot-style. We know this for certain: Apple didn't announce the iPhone 5 at this year's Apple WWDC event, as it has in years past. Instead, we got iOS 5.

That means we won't be seeing the iPhone 5 this summer. Steve Jobs, however,
stated iOS 5 will appear in the autumn. Which is traditionally when the various iPods are refreshed at a music-themed event.

iOS 5 is packed with cool features as we seen it on beta version, including a new notification style that pays homage to Android's drop-down menu. But at the end of the day, it's just software, and it means nothing without some hardware to run it on. iOS 5 will run on the iPod touch, but we don't think an iPod has enough glamour to shepherd iOS 5 into the world.

That's why we're expecting to see the iPhone 5 launch at the same time as iOS 5, in the autumn. In fact, we think the iPhone 5 will cruelly oust the iPod from its own event.

Some pundits are predicting we'll have to wait until 2012 for the iPhone 5 release. But it's already been over a year since the iPhone 4 came out, and we can't see Apple ceding that much ground to the galloping hordes of Android phones. Not to mention the Nokia Windows Phones that are also on the horizon this autumn.

So, if Apple does swap its traditional iPod event for an iPhone 5 fest, when exactly will we be opening our earholes to the message of the fifth Jesus phone? We've run the dates through equations created from numerology, astrology and NumberWang to find out.

Since 2005, Apple has shown a strong tendency to launch its iPods on the first Wednesday after Labour Day, a US bank holiday that celebrates all the work that goes into eating off the back end of a truck.

There are exceptions -- in 2008, the second-generation iPod touch and its siblings were announced on the Tuesday instead, as was the iPod in 2006. But Wednesday is still Apple's overwhelming favourite.

That means that we're laying the the finger of prognostication on Wednesday 7 September 2011.

That's a mere 2 months and 24 days from now, so get planning those app cupcakes now. Don't forget to include the latest iOS 5 apps, such as Newsstand and iMessage.



source: CNET UK

Download Snowbreeze 2.7 untethered Jailbreak for IOS 4.3.3 (DIRECT LINK!!) iPhone 3G/3GS/ iPhone 4/ iPod touch 3G/4G/ Apple TV 2G

The Iphone Dev-Team member iH8snow has released the newest untethered jailbreak tool for IOS 4.3.3, Snowbreeze 2.7.Snowbreeze 2.7 is highly suggested tool for whoever need to preserve baseband for unlocking with Ultrasn0w. Snowbreeze 2.7 is available only for Windows, however , if you are using Mac you should use PwnageTool from Dev-Team .

I have provided direct links to download Snowbreeze 2.7 for 4.3.3 below.




Snowbreeze 2.7
adds full support for iOS 4.3.3. Snowbreeze 2.7 for 4.3.3 let you preserve the baseband if you need to unlock with the latest Ultrasnow 1.2.3 version, you can also add animated boot logos and Multitouch Gestures which i think are really cool but due to the small screen on iPhone Multitouch Gestures are designed more for the iPad.


Snowbreeze 2.7
designed for 4.3.3 supports these devices below ( mainly neede for iPhone 4 and iPhone 3GS that rely on a carrier unlock ):

iPhone 4, 3GS
iPad
iPod Touch 4G, 3G
Apple TV 2G

Follow the
tutorial below in order to jailbreak your iPhone 4, 3GS on iOS 4.3.3 using Snowbreeze 2.7 for 4.3.3 ( if you need too you can easily adapt this guide for the other iDevices as well)

These are the steps to
generate your customized 4.3.3 jailbroken firmware using Snowbreeze 2.7

Download iOS 4.3.3 for iPhone 4 or iPhone 3GS below
Download Snowbreeze 2.7 below
Start Snowbreeze 2.7 for 4.3.3 and click next
Browse for the previously downloaded 4.3.3 firmware file
Wait for Snowbreeze 2.7 to
detect your device ( iPhone 4 or iPhone 3GS )
Follow the on-screen instructions to enter DFU mode and
proceed with part 2

Restoring the custom jailbroken 4.3.3 firmware to your iPhone 4 or iPhone 3GS
using iTunes

Start iTunes and select your iPhone from the left sidebar
Click on the “Restore” button while holding the left SHIFT button and then browse for the custom jailbroken 4.3.3 firmware created with Snowbreeze
Click on OPEN and then wait for iTunes to restore your iPhone to 4.3.3
Once your iPhone 4, 3GS will restart, it will be fully jailbroken on iOS 4.3.3. Done!

You can now unlock your iPhone using Ultrasnow 1.2.3 for 4.3.3. 
Download Links:
Download Snowbreeze 2.7 for 4.3.3


Download iOS 4.3.3 for iPhone 4 ( GSM)
Download iOS 4.3.3 for iPhone 3GS
Download iOS 4.3.3 for iPad
Download iOS 4.3.3 for iPad 2 Wifi
Download iOS 4.3.3 for iPad 2 GSM
Download iOS 4.3.3 for iPad 2 CDMA
Download iOS 4.3.3 for iPod Touch 4G
Download iOS 4.3.3 for iPod Touch 3G

Wednesday, 15 June 2011

Finally peace between Nokia and Apple, regarding long-running legal dispute between the two firms

Nokia and Apple eventually decided to end the long battle about patent dispute, and coming up with a technology licensing agreement which will  end the long-running legal dispute between the two companies.

"The agreement will result in settlement of all patent litigation between the companies," Nokia said.
Nokia said Apple had agreed a one-off payment, the value of which was not disclosed, and continuous royalties to use its technologies.


Nokia sued Apple for patent infringements in 2009 and extended the action in December last year. However this outcome  could lead to same accuses from Nokia to be repeated to  phones using Google's Android software over the same set of patents it has just licensed, suggests one observer.
Apple had countersued, accusing Nokia of infringing its patents.



Nokia's chief executive Stephen Elop said on the firm's legal success: "We are very pleased to have Apple join the growing number of Nokia licensees."

"This settlement demonstrates Nokia's industry-leading patent portfolio and enables us to focus on further licensing opportunities in the mobile communications market."

Apple stated that two companies had agreed to "drop all of our current lawsuits and enter into a licence covering some of each other's patents, but not the majority of the innovations that make the iPhone unique".

"We're pleased to put this behind us and get back to focusing on our respective businesses."

Nokia's several claims against Apple included alleged patent infringements of touch interfaces, caller ID, display illumination, and 3G and wi-fi technologies.

Apple had additionally claimed that Nokia had infringed many of its patents.

Both sides had always denied each other's claims.

"This is the first positive news from Nokia for a long time. They can both focus on their businesses now, and the dispute was settled to Nokia's advantage," said Mikael Rautanen at research group Inderes in Helsinki.

At the end of last month, Nokia said it expected sales and profit margins for the current quarter to be well below its previous forecasts.

Nokia has been struggling to reposition themselves in the rapidly-growing smartphone market, where it is attempting to make up ground lost to rivals such as Apple's iPhone and mobile phones using Google's Android operating system.