Fresh news and solutions for small business. By Ron Seybold

Business, tech research takes off from iPad

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Feeding a business demands information, the awareness that you find in articles and reports. This is a Mac experience at its best these days, using the Web, but the iPad can become a tool to make that task more mobile and more easily shared. It’s also richer, as Wired magazine shows in a video today. (Beware, that’s a Flash video below, so set your Mac’s processors on Stun. Sorry if you’re using an iPhone. You can see the video at the Wired site, too.)


We’ve got an ally in the enterprise reseller marketplace who sent us this video link with a simple note. This fellow, who talks with IT directors and enterprise managers about their future tech needs simply said after seeing the iPad in action, “Now I get it.” Read the rest of this entry »

Easy publishing for mobile apps?

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Content is king of the communication over the Internet, be it on a traditional Web browser or in the screen of an iPhone or iPad. While it’s easy enough to just point Safari at your Web site or blog, if you communicate with customers and prospects using news, there’s a new tool that can let the less-technical business person create a mobile app.

It helps if your blog already has an RSS/CSS feed, apparently, something that most blog services include as a tick-box. Yapper promises a means to create that brand-specific app for smartphones and perhaps the iPad too.

We’ll have a look at the tool when it makes its debut at Macworld next week. Early feature sets in the teaser information tout:

APPER (Your APP maker) is an online self-service for bloggers, newspapers, pod casters and others to make their own native mobile apps in WYSIWYG fashion. Key features:

  • No coding required use existing RSS/ CMS feeds
  • Multiple mobile OS support: iPhone, Android and Blackberry
  • Optimized for mobile user experience: Mobile optimized UI (mobile friendly entire article content with images and videos), Content caching (users can read offline), Fast (no straight RSS feed parsing), Location enabled
  • Customization options: colors and branding
  • Push notifications for breaking stories and events
  • Monetization and analytics support
  • Published: Jan 7th, 2010
  • Category: New Macs & OS
  • Comments: Comments Off

Not even a close call on a tablet competitor

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For a few hours yesterday, a breathless rumor floated up about HP and Microsoft unveiling a tablet mobile device that could steal Apple’s thunder about its upcoming iSlate. The interesting part of the rumor was that it emerged in The New York Times.

The Grey Lady used to be more cautious about its speculations, but the staff flowing in from online jobs have stretched the rumor envelope. The tiny article in the Times‘ Bits blog was written by Ashlee Vance, new to the newspaper’s staff after a long and flashy run at the Web site The Register.

The Microsoft “slate computer” was supposed to be part of MS VP Steve Ballmer’s keynote speech last night. Alas, what some around HP are calling The Courier didn’t debut. Vance wrote great articles for The Register, but the standards for rumors are limbo-low over there.

Ballmer, Microsoft’s chief executive, will unveil a novel take on a slate-type computer during his evening keynote.

The Times only posted the initial rumor article on the Bits blog, not in a printed edition, so the editors only figured they had to post a generic follow-up today on the non-story. The rumor report shows how little can be counted upon for innovation from Microsoft. HP has had its hands on touchscreen technology since 1984, but the last two years it has had serious touch products released. Last night’s cobble was not one of them.

One of the best summaries of What Just Didn’t Happen came in the comments to the Vance article. One reader quoted the line from the article, “So the last thing Mr. Ballmer wants to hold up is a me-too device,” then added

The good news for MS: That didn’t happen.
The bad news for MS: Nothing else happened, either. Read the rest of this entry »

© 2009 Bites of Apple. All Rights Reserved.

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