Google has at last launched an iOS application for Blogger, giving millions of bloggers an easy method to write and publish their blogs from their iPhones.
Foursquare has introduced photos inline feature with check-ins in a latest update to its iPhone application. The new version will add color to the action stream and rejuvenates the look and feel of the application.
The iPhone has become increasingly popular among freelancers, designers, business owners, creative outfits and high street consumers but what makes iPhone become an extensive mobile platform is its ability to support a wealth of apps across a huge spectrum of categories.
iPhones have become a contented gadget now and users are more captivated by its copious applications than the smart phones. When apple released the iPhone, at that point of time thousands of applications
Google Android-powered smartphones have gained prominence in the last two years and grown rapidly to an extent where, as of May 2011 Google said, 400,000 new Android devices were being activated every day compared to 100,000 per day in May 2010.
Here’s just a few iPhone apps to make your life as a graphic designer just a little bit easier.
One of the sweet user interface enhancements provided by Apple’s iPhone is their checkbox-slider functionality. Thomas Reynolds recently released a jQuery plugin that allows you to make your checkboxes look like iPhone sliders. Here’s how to implement that functionality using the beloved MooTools javascript framework.
Regular expressions can be used with NSPredicate that is part of Core Data, available since Mac OS X 10.4 and officially announced for iPhone OS 3.0. Cocoa's WebView and the equivalent UIWebView in Cocoa Touch both support JavaScript with regular expressions. So there sure is regular expressions available on the platforms, but how do you make it available for your own code?
First impressions last, and the very first impression your users have of your iPhone application is the start up. First step is to have a nice Default.png, but not many words spilled on that one, it is well covered in Apple's documentation.
Getting objects to talk to one another in Objective-C is a easy as passing a message from one to the other. These messages are typically passed through the message-invocation mechanism of using the square-braces to bind a message and arguments to a receiver. Most of the time this is a perfectly reasonable way to communicate. However there are times when you need objects to communicate without having explicit knowledge of one another.
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