Posts Tagged ‘MobileMe’
Apple ‘Grab & Go’ sync patent application features… Engadget
Posted by: Gadget Boy in Gadget News on November 5th, 2009
[Via AppleInsider]
Filed under: Software
Apple 'Grab & Go' sync patent application features... Engadget originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Nov 2009 14:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Read | Permalink | Email this | CommentsMobileMe media sync detailed in Apple patent application
Posted by: Gadget Boy in Gadget News on October 19th, 2009

[Via Macworld]
Filed under: Home Entertainment, Laptops, Portable Audio, Portable Video
MobileMe media sync detailed in Apple patent application originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 19 Oct 2009 15:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Read | Permalink | Email this | CommentsFind My iPhone Leads Cops to Robbery Suspects [IPhone]
Posted by: Gadget Boy in Gadget News on August 31st, 2009
Find My iPhone to the rescue again! Pittsburgh Police nabbed three robbery suspects over the weekend, after the man they allegedly robbed used the MobileMe online service to point police to their location.
I'm relieved to see he called the cops and didn't take chances like the guys that personally tracked down a swiped iPhone back in June. That was an amazing tale, though.
The weekend robbery happened in (the apparently appropriately named) Shadyside. North Versailles police have three suspects in custody, and recovered a pellet gun amongst various stolen items.
So for $99 a year, Apple's MobileMe gets you Find My iPhone, email/calendar sync, photo gallery space, and iDisk online backup. But with so many free online services these days, it's really only the tracking/remote wipe feature that interests me (even though someone can just pop up out the SIM card or switch it off if they get into the phone itself). What about you? [Pittsburgh Post-Gazette via Boy Genius Report]
Giz Explains: How Push Works [Giz Explains]
Posted by: Gadget Boy in Gadget News on August 6th, 2009
Push. It's not just a verb that sends people careening down a flight of stairs. It's also not just for guys in suits diddling on BlackBerrys. You hear it featured on new iPhone apps every week. So, what is it?
Well, push describes a lot of things. Push is simply an action. Versus, say, pulling. Maybe that's horribly abstract, so try this: If information shows up on your phone or neural implant or messaging program without you (or your wares) asking for it—that's push. The info is pushed to you, versus you pulling it from the source. There are tons of ways push can be (and is) used.
Email's a pretty good starting point for grasping the difference between push and the other stuff. You probably know good ol' POP3—you log into your mail server and pull down new messages. Maybe it's on a frequent schedule, so it feels automatic, even instant, but you're still reaching out to the mail server every time to check and see if there's new mail to download.
IMAP is a little fancier than POP, where all of your folders and email are the same on all of your computers, phones and other gadgets, and any change you make on one shows up on the other, since it's all happening on a remote server somewhere. But with the standard setup, it's still the same deal—your mail program has to log in, see what's new, and pull it down. IMAP does have a pretty neat trick though, an optional feature called IMAP IDLE, that does push pretty well—it's what the Palm Pre uses for Gmail, for instance. Essentially, with IMAP IDLE, the mail server can tell whatever mail app that you've got new messages waiting, without you (or your app) hammering the refresh button over and over. When the app knows there's new messages, it connects and pulls them down, so it gives you just about the speed of push, without matching the precise mechanism.
While different systems do things differently (obvs), what true push services have in common is that they generally insert a middleman between you and the information source.
RIM's setup for the BlackBerry is probably the most sophisticated. When your BlackBerry registers with the carrier (which has to support BlackBerry), the details are handed to RIM's network operating center, so the NOC knows where to send your mail. The NOC watches your mail server, keeps tabs on the phone's location, and pushes email through to your phone whenever you get new stuff.
What makes it push is that your phone's not actually polling a server for new messages to pull—it only receives them when they hit your inbox, and are then pushed to your phone by RIM's servers. This means you save a lot of battery life that'd be wasted by making the phone constantly hit the servers for updates. The flipside is that when RIM's servers blow up, you don't get email, since it's all routed through their system—hence the other panic that grips dudes in suits once every few months lately.
The other biggie is Microsoft, who has Direct Push, part of Exchange's ActiveSync. It's architected a little bit differently, so it doesn't need the precise kind of data about where your phone is that RIM's NOCs do: The phone or whatever you've got sends an HTTPS with a long lifespan to the Exchange server—if new mail arrives before it dies, the Exchange tells your device there's new stuff, so it should start a sync. After it syncs, the device sends out another long HTTPS request, starting it all over again.
Apple's weak-sauce substitute for multitasking works pretty similarly: The developer has something its wants to send an iPhone, when its application isn't actually running, like an IM. It sends the notification to Apple's push servers, which send the notification to the phone through a "persistent IP connection" the phone maintains with the servers. This connection, which is only maintained when push notifications are turned on, is needed to locate the phone, but still doesn't draw as much power as constantly pinging the mail server.
Of course, those aren't the only push systems around, and it's only getting more and more important as stuff gets shifted to the cloud. We haven't mentioned Android and Google Chrome, but both utilize push (or will) in different ways. Suffice it to say, Google Sync will soon be a major player in this game. But basically, all kinds of different data can be pushed—calendars, contacts, browser data, hell, even IM is a kind of push—and they all work more or less the same broad way. Just don't ask us why there isn't push Gmail on the iPhone yet.
Still something you wanna know? Send questions about pushing, shoving and pancake massacres to tips@gizmodo.com, with "Giz Explains" in the subject line.
Playnice Will Make Your iPhone Auto-Update Google Latitude via MobileMe [IPhone]
Posted by: Gadget Boy in Gadget News on August 4th, 2009
Apple thwarted Google's effort to release Latitude—which allows your control-freak friends to know where you are at all times—as an iPhone application. You can only update it manually using a web page, which makes it not-so-useful. Until now.
Developer Nat Friedman thought the same as you did (something along the lines of "f*cking stupid Apple morons"), and spent the weekend writing a script called playnice. The script will get the iPhone's location information from MobileMe, then sends it to Google's Latitude. Obviously, it only works if you are a MobileMe user, making it less useful for the rest of the mortals who are not willing to pay more dollars to Steve and his minions. [playnice via Nat Friendman]
This is a world you have never seen before, a world normally hidden under miles of water...the landscape of the ocean bed. Click to learn more www.natgeotv.com/draintheocean |
iDisk iPhone App Lightning Review: Halfway There [IPhone Apps]
Posted by: Gadget Boy in Gadget News on July 30th, 2009
Apple's free iDisk app has potential to make that $60 a year for MobileMe even more worthwhile, but for now it's little more than a fancy file viewer with mediocre management capabilities.
With the iDisk app, you can view supported files like documents, PDFs, even stream music and movies (provided they're in the right formats, natch) and remotely delete stuff from your iDisk. An annoying quirk, though, is that you have to dive into every folder individually to get it to refresh and show any new files. Document and PDF viewing work perfectly. With music and movies, the better the connection, the better the streaming experience, though don't expect to stream your whole iTunes library over it—it's a one song at a time kind of deal. And the movie file support is finicky, to say the least. But when it works, it's pretty nice.
The strong point of the iPhone app as a manager is that it makes it incredibly easy to share files—go to the file you want to share, click the little wireless icon, and you can email a link to it with an expiration date you set. It also has a bookmark list of your friends' public folders, you can quickly get back to them.
Bottom line, Air Sharing has nothing to worry about. Besides requiring a MobileMe account, you can't upload files to your iDisk from the iPhone, or store any of them locally, which is what really gimps the app. I'd hope that Apple would expand its capabilities, but my suspicion is that they don't actually want you to store files on your iPhone or browse through them like you would on a regular computer—it's a conceptual line they don't want to cross, so we've got a viewer with great interface here, nothing more.
iPhone Owners Score Free MobileMe iDisk App [IPhone]
Posted by: Gadget Boy in Gadget News on July 29th, 2009
Apple has just released MobileMe iDisk, a free app that allows you to view and share your MobileMe iDisk files from the iPhone or iPod touch.
The official feature list includes the options to:
- View files on your iDisk
- Access Public folders
- Easily share files from your iPhone
- Quickly access recently viewed files
- View iPhone-supported file types-including iWork, Office, PDF, QuickTime and more. (Files larger than 20MB may not be viewable.)
But while the app is free, keep in mind that you'll of course need a MobileMe subscription to access your very own iDisk. [iTunes via MacRumors]
Find My iPhone reunites true nerd with lost iPhone
Posted by: Gadget Boy in Gadget News on June 23rd, 2009
[Thanks, Tristan W.]
Filed under: Cellphones, Handhelds
Find My iPhone reunites true nerd with lost iPhone originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 23 Jun 2009 12:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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