kgreimel
Zorlox
kgreimel

With the capacity of flash memory nowadays, I'm surprised people still keep secrets on their internal drives.

The iBooks format can be extracted to give a bunch of xhtml files (css as well). I think it's only a matter of time before someone writes an application that modifies the css files and adds some javascript so these files can be viewed in a web browser or finds a simple way to convert from iBooks to ePub3.

I like to take my dad's approach - my parent's home wifi password is a very long, random string of jibberish. Should anyone ask for my password to anything, it gets changed to a temporary very long, random string of nonsense and characters that gets printed out in no larger than size 9 font (or sent as a screenshot).

This is how I see the future of (Powerpoint) presentations. It's extremely interactive, you can use AirPlay mirroring to send it to a projector or tv, you can serve the file to your audience so they can follow along at their own pace (I'm curious to see what these files would look like on laptops or other tablets).

I'm more interested in sharing an ePub (with 3D objects, videos, etc.) with a few people and avoiding listing it on iTunes if possible.

Can you send the file to someone and open it with iBooks like you can with pdf's?

"It connects to your iPhone wirelessly via Bluetooth and to the Nike+ webapp when you plug in the band"

They could let you choose what chapters to keep in local storage. It'd save space, plus some classes only go so far into a book. We used the same textbook for 3 calculus courses, so I'd only need chapters 1-6 for calc 1.

That's better than I expected. I wonder if iBooks 2 will let you choose to open files with it (as iBooks currently does with pdf's) - it could be fun making short interactive "textbooks" and hosting them myself rather than going though iBooks/iTunes.

Here's the map for those interested.

Clearly blackrout is a copyrighted term that belongs to the RIAA. This site should be shut down for commenters using their intellectual property without the expressed, written consent of the RIAA, Jonathan Lamy, and no less than 3 of the founding fathers.

That's what I've been hoping for. I can think of plenty of uses for myself, but hardly any for the average consumer so I'm not getting my hopes up too high.

HTC's press release says it'll be 4.7"

Dislike: That's big. I like being about to reach all 4 screen corners with my thumb (in either portrait or landscape) - anything over 4" seems awkwardly big.

You can change the privacy settings so that you have to approve each time you're tagged in a photo, video, status, etc.

"The explosive detection system got itchy and the scanner image the fishes."

Since there aren't passwords to open Mail, iCal, iPhoto, ... on OS X, I doubt it'd be implemented on iOS. A guest account on the other hand, would be fantastic.

Would you really want to have to enter a passcode to unlock your phone, then enter your password to read an email? If that's the case, use webmail.

I created new accounts specifically for sharing - Apple ID, Netflix, Hulu+, computer. We've got a shared email address for the calendar and contacts mainly. Otherwise everything is private. We essentially have read only access to everything (bank accounts, Facebook, etc) which is fine by both of us. There's nothing to

iTunes and the Mac App Store are about it. Install an App on one computer and it's simple to install it on another, download a movie on one device and it's simple (or automatic) to get it onto your Mac. If iTunes were Mac only, this would probably be a huge deal.