Derek
Posted 12 hours ago
via david
183 Notes
Posted 3 days ago
via ericalba
17 Notes
Posted 1 week ago
2 Notes
Posted 2 weeks ago
via finerios
4 Notes
In iPhoto for iOS, you can compare multiple photos at once. You can even zoom in on one or each of them while comparing.
With one photo selected, simply flick another up from the photo strip into the lightbox, which can preview a total of six. You can also long-press on them. Flick photos away from the lightbox to remove them. Tap photos in the lightbox to preview them on top of the others.
iPhoto for iOS is available in the App Store.
Posted 2 weeks ago
via blech
7 Notes
What if pixels weren’t necessarily supposed to look like little squares and sit in the so-called “right order”? What if what we call “real” or “true” images were not the only way the World around us can be represented? What if photographic data was just… data? What if it could be reinterpreted?
Free on the App Store. Images from Fast Co Design, via George Oates.
Posted 2 weeks ago
via onethingwell
13 Notes
Thinglist is a super-simple iOS app for remembering things in your personal life. For example, when you hear about a good book or restaurant, where do you write it down?
Thinglist is a pretty, no-frills way to save these things
Posted 2 weeks ago
via fastcompany
62 Notes
A new app uses the power of your own positive thinking to create a placebo effect—which works even if you know it’s happening.
You start by setting a goal: say, more joy or love in your life. Then, you choose someone to give you the placebo (maybe a friend or family member), what you want it to be (a pill, say), and where you want to take it (maybe a forest where you go running with a friend). You then “take” the placebo whenever you want to, following a pre-set ritual built into the app.
The point is to replicate what’s important about the placebo effect, which isn’t the pill itself, but the experience.
Posted 3 weeks ago
via onethingwell
21 Notes
Take your notes like it’s 1985. Classic Notes puts the days of one-button mice and 3.5” floppy disks in your pocket, without breaking your back.
Via @zero.
Posted 4 weeks ago
Posted 1 month ago
1 Notes
Posted 1 month ago
via timesdigitaldevelopment
2 Notes
On 27th April we released an ‘e-paper’ app for the iPad. This app is a brand new product for The Times and Sunday Times and allows subscribers to read a PDF ‘facsimile’ of the print edition of the newspaper.
Some may see this as a perplexing almost retrogressive step for a brand committed to a digital future. In fact, this product was developed and released for two reasons:
1. As a response to customer requests to be able to read the print edition in a digital format.
2. To allow customers with an iPad1 who have been experiencing problems reading the 7 Day iPad app the opportunity to read the edition on their tablets.
The app publishes all the supplements of The Times and The Sunday Times with the exception of the magazines which will be added within the next few weeks. The product is not a newsstand product to avoid the confusion of having two version of The Times next to each other as we still prefer and wish to promote our native digital 7 Day App as the best way to read our content digitally.
Although not exclusively available for iPad 1, all developers and publishers face the challenge of supporting hardware that is increasingly outdated as software develops and the limitations of devices that are still only three years old becoming increasingly apparent.
Ever since Apple effectively discontinued support for the iPad1 by restricting the latest version of its operating system (iOS6) to iPad2 and above there has been an ongoing debate in the development community regarding the level of support to provide for legacy versions of iOS and hence iPad1 owners as a consequence.
With the pace of product development since the inception of the iPad only 3 years ago, it is easy to overlook the fact that the original iPad was an expensive, premium purchase of around £400 and the notion that it is already obsolete and must be upgraded is not surprisingly hard to swallow for many of our customers. There is no evidence that Apple deliberately discontinues its products to drive sales of its new products - in fact it is generally accepted that they do this via the release of great new features and improvements in their new releases.
Around 12% of The Times tablet customers own an iPad1 and, although we have no current plans to discontinue support for iOS5 in forthcoming releases, it is increasingly problematic developing a software product that takes advantages of current system and device capabilities (in terms of processing power and memory) but is still performant on older models.
Posted 1 month ago
1 Notes
Star Wars Day • my lockscreen wallpaper today • #MayThe4thBeWithYou #starwarsday #4thMay #MayThe4th #MayTheForceBeWithYou #starwars #typography #capitalletters #uppercase #bold #italic #iphone #lockscreen #wallpaper #screenshot #slidetounlock #iOS • in the style of #keepcalmandcarryon #keepcalmand #keepcalm • #black #white #bw #mono #blackandwhite #2013 #lofi #lux #st #thest
Posted 1 month ago
via betalist
4 Notes
Roamer is an app that drastically reduces roaming charges while traveling. It utilizes the mobile operator’s infrastructure of the country you’re visiting and allows you to keep your regular phone number for both incoming and outgoing calls. Roamer ensures excellent call quality, while elements of VoIP technology reduces the costs of calls when abroad by 90%.