BlackBerry Tablet OS v1.0.7 is released today. New features and enhancements include: more flexibility around where and how you save attachments for viewing and editing, ZIP attachment support, portrait support in pictures app, pinch to zoom in video app and additional languages support.
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The 1.0.7 release was rumored to be available on 7/15 but it never came. Since it was only a rumor, no worries right? For Blackberry phone users, there was a Bridge update early Tuesday morning which worked fine. After TabletOS 1.0.7 was released on on Tuesday after the Bridge update, customers could no longer see the Bridge applications even though the bridge would connect.
I wonder if the initial delay was the reason RIM angered customers on Friday after telling vendors earlier in the week the update would come then.
I don't use a BB phone for now so I use my Playbook Bridgeless.
The day has finally come! Jolla has finally announced the launch device for its Sailfish operating system - and by god this is a looker. It's decidedly different from other phones out there, but it has good specifications and carries a relatively reasonably price tag - EUR 399, and it's up for pre-order today, shipping in the fourth quarter of this year.
Why does Google get so much credit in the technology industry? Why, despite the company's many obvious failings, do many geeks and enthusiasts still hold a somewhat positive view on the all-knowing technology giant? A specific talk at Google I/O this week provides the answer.
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"Windows is indeed slower than other operating systems in many scenarios, and the gap is worsening." That's one way to start an insider explanation of why Windows' performance isn't up to snuff. Written by someone who actually contributes code to the Windows NT kernel, the comment on Hacker News, later deleted but reposted with permission on Marc Bevand's blog, paints a very dreary picture of the state of Windows development. The root issue? Think of how Linux is developed, and you'll know the answer.
This is one of those news items that's fun to write, fun to read, fun to comment on, and where no one will be able to say anything unkind. It's all just one big ball of awesome fluffiness. TuneTracker, the BeOS radio automation software, has just released something very special: TuneTracker System 5, the first version designed entirely and specifically for Haiku. In fact, it actually includes Haiku in the software package. Better yet, TuneTracker also unveiled several system-in-a-box products - which have Haiku and TuneTracker pre-installed.
Exactly twenty years ago, a document was published that played a huge role in establishing the web as we know it today. Twenty years later, and this simple and straightforward document is proof of an irrefutable fact: while closed technologies can change markets, open technologies can change the world.
Oh multitasking. That staple of computing that got thrown out the window with many modern smartphones. We got some rudimentary thing in its place - but even as multitasking on phone and tablets improves, its user-visible side remains cumbersome. Windows 8 has a neat implementation, and now it's time Android follows in it footsteps.
They're here! Whether that excites you or not remains to be seen, but the Galaxy S4, which will most likely become the best selling Android smartphone of the year by a huge margin, has been reviewed by all the major sites, and there's lots of interesting conclusions in there - although I think most of you will get the gist.
Nokia has posted its quarterly results for the first quarter of 2013, and just like the quarters that came before, there's not a whole lot of good news in there. The rise in Lumia sales still can't even dream of making up for the sales drop in Symbian phones, and when broken down in versions, the sales figures for Windows Phone 8 Lumias in particular are very disappointing. In North America, Nokia is getting slaughtered.
The day has finally come: Google has started shipping Google Glass to the lucky few early adopters. Now that it's shipping, Google has also unveiled a lot more about the API and the specifications of the device itself. While the company had already given out substantial details at earlier occasions, there are still a few surprises here.
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The 1.0.7 release was rumored to be available on 7/15 but it never came. Since it was only a rumor, no worries right? For Blackberry phone users, there was a Bridge update early Tuesday morning which worked fine. After TabletOS 1.0.7 was released on on Tuesday after the Bridge update, customers could no longer see the Bridge applications even though the bridge would connect.
I wonder if the initial delay was the reason RIM angered customers on Friday after telling vendors earlier in the week the update would come then.
I don't use a BB phone for now so I use my Playbook Bridgeless.