Sunday, April 29, 2012

How to Manage Your Social Media Life on Your Mobile Phone




Warning: Do not read this post if you want to keep your ‘real life’ friends.

Long gone are the days where you need a laptop of desktop to mange your social networks. In fact, thanks to the developments in smart phones, you can set up, manage and use each of your social profiles on the move.

That’s right, we’re going to show you how you can ditch the heavy equipment for good and go 100% mobile!

Let’s begin by assuming you are aware of and are using many mobile versions of the most popular social networking sites. Just in case, let’s recap the big ones:

Facebook for Android, Twitter mobile, Instagram, Google+, LinkedIn, Foursquare and Tumblr.

Now, let’s dig a little deeper.

The ‘supporting’ cast


Facebook Messenger - If you want to take your Facebook chat function with you, then this is the app for you. It tells you who’s online and allows you to carry out instant chats from the palm of your hand. Nice eh?
TwitPlus – addon for Twitter - This should probably be called ‘Twitter on Steroids’. This adds things like ‘odd style retweet’ and other functionality not available in the native Twitter mobile app.
All-in-one solutions
Of course, if you don’t want to have a million separate apps you can download one of the many cross-platform services. The best of these include: Hootsuite, TweetDeck, Seesmic, UberSocial (although this last one is more a Twitter-specific app).

Time to show off


As readers of The Next Web, we expect you to be familiar with most of these apps. Now it’s time to show you some stuff that’ll really impress your friends. The hottest social apps and games doing the rounds at the moment include:

Draw Something (collaborative drawing app), Words with Friends (like scrabble), Hooked (a game recommendation app), Fancy (a Pinterest style curation app), and Path (the semi-private social network).
Pinterest hasn’t released an official app yet, but you can always download Pin’d.
We haven’t really talked much about video yet, and there’s more to life than just YouTube mobile. The best of the bunch is an app called SocialCam from Justin.tv which allows easy video sharing with your friends.
Useful utilities
If you want to manage your online life from your mobile, there are some great socially-inspired apps to choose from too, including:

Evernote (web clipping and note taking app), ANY.do (collaborative to-do list) and DropBox.

That should ensure you never miss a beat!

Additional resources:
Zeebox launches in Google Play
Spotify unveils its new Android app
Yuri Arcurs via shutterstock

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- Posted using BlogPress from my iPhone

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Facebook adds names to Timeline Friend photos, makes it easier to find new friends


Facebook adds names to Timeline Friend photos, makes it easier to find new friends

5886225374 c57c6c1966 z 520x245 Facebook adds names to Timeline Friend photos, makes it easier to find new friends

Facebook has made another minor change to users' Timeline profiles, incorporating a new design for Friend listings that include both a person's name and profile photo, making it easier for other users to make new connections via their existing connections.

The update appears to have rolled out over the past 24 hours, ensuring that when a user visits their friend's Facebook profile, the Friends box immediately draws the their attention:

Screen Shot 2012 04 28 at 10.21.21 Facebook adds names to Timeline Friend photos, makes it easier to find new friends

Before, friends were listed but a user had to mouseover the person's image to view their name on the resulting popup.

You could argue that Facebook's new design has elements of Microsoft's Windows Phone/Metro interface, a layout that is both simple but effective at encouraging users to click through to other people's profiles and expand connections.

Facebook recently increased the size of Timeline profile images, just days after Google updated Google+ profiles to sport a larger photo. It appears that Facebook has been working to make the most of images on the social network, helping with the identification of its users and driving interaction between them.


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Oliver Yatco

Gifture: The stunning iOS app that turns your photos into awesome animated GIFs


» The Next Web Top Stories

Screen Shot 2012 04 27 at 13.28.54 520x245 Gifture: The stunning iOS app that turns your photos into awesome animated GIFs

As photo-sharing apps start to hit the mainstream — Facebook's $1 billion Instagram acquisition perhaps the most notable — app developers, startups and entrepreneurs are increasingly forced to find new ways of tapping into the booming photo app market.

Staying true to its photo roots, Gifture is a new free app that bridges the gap between the static photo and a video, animating your photos to create really impressive shareable images that can be shared with your friends inside the Gifture network but also to Twitter and Facebook for a wider reach.

Animated GIF apps aren't new, in fact they are seeing a bit of a boom at the moment. We've reviewed Cinemagram in the past, which is able to animate frames from videos with amazing results, but Gifture not only animates your photos, but also enables you to add your own images and do it using one of the most aesthetically pleasing apps we've had the pleasure of using.

Gifture's creator James McDonald told The Next Web that the seed of an idea for Gifture came around June 2011 when he happened to stumble upon CinemaGraphs.com.

He notes:

I was in awe. The GIFs on that website are absolutely stunning. I spoke with Devin (the developer) and discussed about possibly making an iPhone/iPod app and he was all ears. We thought we could make an app where we could have the Instagram-like base, but using GIFs instead of still photos (although Gifture does support stills as well).

The idea was fully realised in November, when development started on the app. When you look at it, Gifture's feed and menus resemble those of more popular apps like Instagram, but McDonald wanted to build an app that he was proud to use:

We were inspired by the basic functions of Instagram, including its feed. However we wanted to build a product that we wanted to use, something that we thought could be fun and easy to operate.

Instagram is a game changer and brings out the inner photographer in everyone, in my opinion. However, we felt that with GIFs you can tell a better story over still images. They can also be absolutely hilarious, so we're all for users to keep that trend going!

At the time of writing, this is one of the most popular posts on Gifture; an animated GIF of a user dancing outside the Apple Store in Paris:

185435621 Gifture: The stunning iOS app that turns your photos into awesome animated GIFs

Upon downloading the app, you will be welcomed with a sign-up screen, displaying the most popular posts on Gifture. From here, you have the option to sign up to the service using either your Twitter or Facebook accounts, signing-up for and logging into the service in a matter of seconds.

IMG 2386 520x780 Gifture: The stunning iOS app that turns your photos into awesome animated GIFs    IMG 2389 520x780 Gifture: The stunning iOS app that turns your photos into awesome animated GIFs

Similar to Instagram, Gifture offers a feed of photos, which will populate GIFs created by friends you add from within the app. The popular tab takes you back to the buzzworthy images, whilst the Activity tab shows you new follows, likes, comments and mentions of you and your friends.

When it comes to using the app, it couldn't be simpler. Hitting the photo button will load the photo app, overlaying a small grid which will show how images will be cropped to fit the 500 x 500 pixel GIF.

IMG 2387 520x780 Gifture: The stunning iOS app that turns your photos into awesome animated GIFs   IMG 2393 520x780 Gifture: The stunning iOS app that turns your photos into awesome animated GIFs

Selecting the small 'a' icon on the photo screen will switch to automatic mode. This will allow you to take ten consecutive shots, making a mini video, resulting in images like the Apple Store photo above.

Once you have captured your scene, Gifture provides filters — including Black & White, Sepia, Pop, False Color, Monochrome, Vibrance, or Invert — and also provides customized playback rates for each animated photo series. This means that if you want a fast GIF or a slower animation, you have complete control at all times.

You also have the option of stitching photos you have already taken together.

IMG 2392 520x780 Gifture: The stunning iOS app that turns your photos into awesome animated GIFs   IMG 2388 520x780 Gifture: The stunning iOS app that turns your photos into awesome animated GIFs

Before submission, you can share images to your Gifture stream but also Twitter and Facebook as a GIF. An additional context menu allows the sharing of a link to each photo in an iMessage, SMS and email.

Screen Shot 2012 04 27 at 13.22.16 520x270 Gifture: The stunning iOS app that turns your photos into awesome animated GIFs

The app, the website and the resulting images are all stunning, bringing together a great user experience and what its creators hope will be the start of a thriving social network.

We asked McDonald if he had any plans to monetize the service, to which he replied that it wasn't something the duo had given much thought, adding: "If users take a liking to the app we have a lot of cool stuff planned and hopefully we'll never have to go down that road."

Gifture is a free to download and is available on iPhone 3GS, 4 & 4S or iPod touch.

➤ Gifture

 

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Oliver Yatco

Thursday, April 26, 2012

iOS developers plan an alternative to WWDC after sell out


iOS developers plan an alternative to WWDC after sell out

Apple's Worldwide Developer Conference is scheduled to take place in San Francisco from June 11th to June 15th. Tickets for the event sold out in less than two hours, leaving many West Coast developers in the dark, and the Cupertino-based company is enforcing restrictions this year that prevent tickets from being transferred. For developers who aren't interested in legally changing their name to get past Apple's restrictions, there is an alternative — Indie Developer Labs. "Indie Developer Labs is an open area where developers are provided with space to work, free Wi-Fi, and an open environment to connect with other developers. Our mission is to help foster the collaborative spirit of the Apple developer community," the organizers said, adding that a hackathon event is being planned as well. The event is being organized by Kyle Kinkade, Craig Fox and Nate True, who are looking to "help the developer community have a place to collaborate during WWDC." IDL will take place from June 12th to June 15th in San Francisco, just blocks away from where Apple's event will be held at the Moscone Center.

Read


Original Page: http://www.bgr.com/2012/04/27/ios-developers-plan-an-alternative-to-wwdc-after-sell-out/

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Oliver Yatco

London Science Museum goes mobile with an augmented reality app


London Science Museum goes mobile with an augmented reality app

Science Museum

Using your Android phone in a museum might not be your first thought, but if you head to the London Science Museum that is exactly what you should do. Featuring well known British TV personality, Top Gear's James May, their Science Stories app takes advantage of augmented reality technology to bring the museum alive. 

May will be your own personal guide to 9 of the best exhibits in the "Making The Modern World" gallery. By pointing the app at relevant points throughout the exhibits, your very own James May will appear on your screen and talk you through what you see in front of you. While not necessarily a completely new idea, it is refreshing to see an institution such as a famous museum moving into the mobile experience. Better still, at £1.99 in the Google Play Store, it's likely cheaper than those awful headphone tour guides you can purchase. Download links can be found after the break, and at the source link you can find a trigger for the app that you can try at home. 

Source: London Science Museum

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Oliver Yatco

Update: It appeared that the Google Drive app had reached 5 million downloads, however this was a reflection of downloads for the Google Docs application. We apologise for any confusion caused.

It’s been an interesting few days around the tech world, with the imminent launch of Google Drive looming large. But now the service is live at http://drive.google.com/start so get downloading and let’s take a look:

As we reported only a bit ago Google appears to be aiming the service at companies and Google Apps users rather than positioning it as a consumer-facing service a la Dropbox. In fact, due to the deep integration with Google Docs, Drive appears to be more like a Docs upgrade than a stand-alone service.

Now, here’s what you need to know:

  • Drive gives new users 5 GB free for each user account. Upgrades are 25GB for $2.49/month, 100GB for $4.99/month or even 1TB for $49.99/month
  • Docs storage does not count against your Google Drive quota
  • Desktop apps for Windows and OS X are available today. Android is there too but iOS integration is coming in the next few weeks
  • Drive will allow 30+ file types to open natively in the browser, including Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator and HD video

So there are the facts, now let’s examine what they mean.

First off, I was wrong. I had billed Google Drive as being a direct competitor for Dropbox, but it appears that Google has other ideas in mind. There’s absolutely no doubt that Drive is aimed squarely at enterprise-level storage options such as Box, with the hope that those companies are already using Google Apps services. But even if a company isn’t a Google Apps user, near-limitless storage could be a great way to persuade them toward being one.

If Google had come out of the gates with Android and iOS integration, it could still have held a really good chance at unseating Dropbox for some users. While it would be foolish to think that every Dropbox user would leave the service for Google Drive, there are those who aren’t as tied to their Dropbox accounts and would welcome deeper Google integration.

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