Archive for July 13th, 2008

Back in January, social music service Last.fm announced that it would be launching something called the Artist Royalty Program that grants unsigned artists to reap royalties each time one of their songs is played through the site’s ad-supported streaming music feature or Web radio. (They just have to …

Source [The social]

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Yelp on the iPhone

Yelp on the iPhone maps and calls destinations and provides user ratings, but leaves off other social-networking elements.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

Yelp for iPhone contains all the ingredients you’d expect from the well-known site for users to rate local business and restaurant listings–except one. It has a perplexing tendency to space out when loading user reviews. The instability is surely an early bug, but a detraction nonetheless.

Apart from that, Yelp for iPhone features a clear display composed of category listings for nearby restaurants, bars, banks, and so on. Like so many of the other apps that CNET editors have reviewed, Yelp’s iPhone offering taps into the phone’s GPS receptors to find matching listings in your neighborhood, with further parameters on distance and hours available in the button marked Filter.

Each listing on the results page squeezes in the address, user ratings, distance, and price range. Drilling deeper spreads the information out in a format that lets you map the location, click to call, start browsing through user reviews, and bookmark the page.

Yelp for iPhone

Yelp.com is a data-intensive site bulging with user views and social-networking addenda. The iPhone app was clearly never intended as a replacement, but as a companion for the lost or weary to seek out a bike shop or bite to eat. That much is evident by the read-only quality, mobile-specific mapping and call functions, and the de-emphasis on social networking. Still, while the closed, self-centeredness of Yelp for iPhone is somewhat refreshing, certain scheduling capabilities would be welcome–like the ability to invite a friend to lunch.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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By Michael R. Crittenden Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES ARLINGTON, Va. (Dow Jones)–U.S. financial markets need to be made more resilient and stable, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke stated Tuesday, possibly by giving the central bank much broader authority to collect information and exercise authority over the nation’s financial firms. Talking at a Federal Deposit […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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When the iPhone App Store was mentioned in Steve Jobs’ WWDC keynote, one of the many applications announced was a TypePad blogging tool, courtesy of Six Apart (The company also makes two other blogging tools; Movable Type and Vox). Now that the App Store has launched, other blogging platforms like WordPress are coming forward with their own iPhone app plans.

This day, WordPress put out a video demonstrating its very own iPhone blogging tool, which supports WordPress.com blogs and self-hosted WordPress.org blogs (as long as it’s version 2.5.1 or later). WordPress promises the iPhone app will let you create and edit posts, will support multiple blogs as well as privacy settings, plus it will let you upload images directly from your camera or library. You can also preview the post in the iPhone’s Safari browser before hitting Publish. While you can currently post to your WordPress blog via the Safari browser, this native iPhone app will hopefully offer a superior and more seamless experience. It isn’t out yet, but seeing as the App Store is live and the iPhone 3G will be in U.S. stores tomorrow, we anticipate it’ll be out very soon. We expect to see a similar iPhone app from Blogger soon as well.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) — S&P Equity Research on Tuesday hiked Yahoo Inc. to purchase from hold with a 12-month price target of $27. “We are well aware of Yahoo’s troubles, including a less firm global on the web advertising market, notable competition, recent losses of substantial management talent, inconsistent execution, and considerable distractions and uncertainty related to the Aug. 1 shareholder meeting,” […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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What does the iPhone 3G have to do with the future of social platforms like Facebook and OpenSocial? A lot, actually.

It’s because of the iPhone App Store, the add-on to the iTunes Store that opened its doors on Thursday in anticipation of the new device and its iPhone 2.0 software. …

Source [The social]

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(uploaded to Flickr by respres)

The first-generation iPhone is being replaced, and even some of the EcoGeekiest folks in the world simply can’t stand to have an outdated cell phone. If you’re exhausted of the slow speed of your first iPhone, what’s the best way to dispose of it?

It turns out that there are a lot of answers to that question. Since we at EcoGeek are maniacally concerned about these things, we decided to put together a list, in order of greenness, of what you can do with your old iPhone — and, by extension, most electronic devices.

Greenest: If it ain’t broke don’t fix it
Your greenest option is to keep using your current phone. The new iPhone doesn’t have any ecological advantages over the old one (it’s not like it’s solar powered … yet), so there’s really no reason to upgrade. Buying a new phone simply creates a bigger market for the resource-intensive creation of electronics.

Of course, if it is broken, you can use services like  BuyMyTronics.com, which will pay between $10 and $90 for your busted iPhone depending on its condition (a price that would likely be higher if Apple didn’t make the things so darned difficult to repair).

Brett Mosely, CEO of BuyMyTronics, states that Apple devices tend to hold onto value very well: “I don’t think that the iPhone G1 market is going to drop out. It’s still a solid phone … better than the competition. I think they’ll drop a tiny, but will hold well for a while. They’re still awesome phones.”

Greener: Give, sell, or trade locally
If you can avoid shipping your phone across the country to a new buyer, you absolutely should. Craigslist lets you sell or swap your phone locally. And you can get a good deal without the hassle of shipping. 16GB iPhones in great condition are going for around $375 on Craigslist right now.

Green: Sell globally
If staying local and selling it yourself is too much trouble, simpler options abound. The aforementioned BuyMyTronics.com will pay $250 for an iPhone in good condition with minimal hassle. Others providing the same service include Second Rotation ($235 for a used 16GB  iPhone) and CellPhoneTradeins.com ($210 for a used 16GB iPhone).

Not green: Recycle it
There are electronics recycling options available nowadays, and I heartily recommend you explore them for devices that are no longer in demand. But even if your iPhone was run over by a truck and then lit on fire, BuyMyTronics.com will still find a use for it. Mosely states his company once scavenged parts from an iPod Nano that had been run over by a tank in Iraq. And whatever it can’t use is recycled by a Basel-certified, local recycling facility.

Recycling is for devices that have outlived their useful lives. And, frankly, there isn’t an iPhone in the world that has yet outlived its useful life. So don’t even consider recycling one of these puppies … it’s a waste of money and resources.

And EcoGeeks who want to downgrade to a more environmentally friendly, low-power option, you can actually sell your in-demand iPhone, and purchase a green phone for far cheaper.

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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Looks like some big-media deal-making went into this one.

Photobucket, the photo-sharing site that was acquired by News Corp.’s Fox Interactive Media last year, has announced the launch of an iPhone application (download), just like everybody else.

Users can browse their Photobucket albums, as well as upload images from …

Source [The social]

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Looks like some big-media deal-making went into this one.

Photobucket, the photo-sharing site that was acquired by News Corp.’s Fox Interactive Media last year, has announced the launch of an iPhone application (download), just like everybody else.

Users can browse their Photobucket albums, as well as upload images from …

Source [The social]

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