Recommended Posts

  On 06/01/2011 at 08:24, Digitalx said:

apple wants you to open your app to view the content and nothing else so they can say this app has been used 6,000,000,000 times, amazing, incredible, revolutionary!

That's absurd. There are no "app has been used x times" statistics. Well, at least not in an easily accessible place. Apple wants to sell their products just like any other company. Nothing more, nothing less. Incredible! Revolutionary!

  On 06/01/2011 at 08:19, Intrinsica said:

To the people saying that they don't want widgets, the addition of widgets wouldn't affect you at all would it? I mean, if you didn't want them then you wouldn't have to add them. The same mentality applies to Android, people don't have to add widgets.

I must admit, widgets was one of the selling points for me getting an Android phone. Not the selling point, but certainly one of them.

Exactly. Just like Dashboard in Mac OS X. Its there if you want to use it but no one is forcing you. I think we will see something like widgets (or an updated notification system) in the next iOS version. Honestly, there really isn't much left when compared to other mobile OS on the market. I guess they could include a universal grammar checker or something :D

  • 1 month later...

Sorry for bumping an old(ish) thread. But I have recently JB my iOS device, to allow for Widgets and better notifications. FOr me this brings a new lease of life for my 3GS. One thing that has annoyed me for months was the fact I had to unlock the device everytime I wanted to see if I had emails (true it only takes a few seconds) But I'd rather just glance at my screen to see if its worth looking through my emails. LockInfo is such a great tool! I get the email header so I can choose if I want to read it.

If Apple do not offically support apps ike these then I will be leaving my iOS devices behind and going for WP7/Android in July '11

Widgets should not be mandatory either, allow users to have the choice to displaying them. Think that would suit all...?

  On 06/01/2011 at 00:18, Shadrack said:

Are you kidding me? Apple did a brilliant job with their multitasking support. How do I know this, for sure? Because many a friend who own an Android handset bitch-and-moan about their battery life. Meanwhile I'm running on a charge from 2 days ago... :laugh:

But everyone is entitled to their opinion... :sleep:

Only services on Android can consume CPU power. Other background tasks are frozen on Android, it's not Android's multitasking that causes battery drain.

  On 06/01/2011 at 00:18, Shadrack said:
Are you kidding me? Apple did a brilliant job with their multitasking support. How do I know this, for sure? Because many a friend who own an Android handset bitch-and-moan about their battery life. Meanwhile I'm running on a charge from 2 days ago... :laugh:
I can last 2 days on my Android handset aswell, but that means jack **** when related to multi-tasking. Multi-tasking is properly implemented on the Android not on iOS.
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • qBittorrent 5.1.1 by Razvan Serea The qBittorrent project aims to provide a Free Software alternative to µtorrent. qBittorrent is an advanced and multi-platform BitTorrent client with a nice user interface as well as a Web UI for remote control and an integrated search engine. qBittorrent aims to meet the needs of most users while using as little CPU and memory as possible. qBittorrent is a truly Open Source project, and as such, anyone can and should contribute to it. qBittorrent features: Polished µTorrent-like User Interface Well-integrated and extensible Search Engine Simultaneous search in most famous BitTorrent search sites Per-category-specific search requests (e.g. Books, Music, Movies) All Bittorrent extensions DHT, Peer Exchange, Full encryption, Magnet/BitComet URIs, ... Remote control through a Web user interface Nearly identical to the regular UI, all in Ajax Advanced control over trackers, peers and torrents Torrents queueing and prioritizing Torrent content selection and prioritizing UPnP / NAT-PMP port forwarding support Available in ~25 languages (Unicode support) Torrent creation tool Advanced RSS support with download filters (inc. regex) Bandwidth scheduler IP Filtering (eMule and PeerGuardian compatible) IPv6 compliant Available on most platforms: Linux, Mac OS X, Windows, OS/2, FreeBSD qBittorrent 5.1.1 changelog: BUGFIX: Don't interpret wildcard pattern as filepath globbing (glassez) BUGFIX: Fix appearance of search history length spinbox (glassez) BUGFIX: Remove dubious seeding time max value (glassez) BUGFIX: Fix ratio handling (glassez) BUGFIX: Fix compilation with Qt 6.6.0 (glassez) WEBUI: Make General tab text selectable by default (dezza) WEBUI: Add versioning to local preferences (Chocobo1) WEBUI: Make multi-rename search & replace fields use a monospace font (Atk) WEBUI: Fix wrong replacement sequence in IPv6 string (Chocobo1) WEBUI: Fix memory leak (bolshoytoster) WEBUI: Fix path autofill in set location and new category (tehcneko) RSS: Mark matched article as "read" if it refers to a duplicate torrent (glassez) WINDOWS: Update command line help message (KanishkaHalder1771) WINDOWS: NSIS: Don't require agreement on the license page (Chocobo1) LINUX: Fix preview not opening on Wayland (Isak05) LINUX: Add fallback for random number generator (Chocobo1) Download: qBittorrent 5.1.1 | Portable | ~40.0 MB (Open Source) Download: qBittorrent 64-bit installer (qt6) | 41.7 MB Links: qBittorrent Home page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Linus Torvalds releases a pretty ordinary Linux 6.16-rc3 by Paul Hill Linus Torvalds, the head and founder of the Linux kernel, has announced the release of Linux 6.16-rc3. This release comes with fixes for new features that were introduced during the merge window several weeks ago, and for old features where issues have been detected or improvements need to be made. If you remember last week, Torvalds said that rc2 seemed smaller than usual, putting it down to people going on vacation. He said this week’s rc3 seems to be in the usual ballpark for this time of the cycle, so everything looks “entirely normal.” In terms of changes, this release is “dominated” by wireless networking and GPU driver updates, however, Torvalds doesn’t think that anything really huge stands out this time. While nothing stands out Torvalds urged people to carry on testing and submitting patches. This update saw improvements to the core system and architecture. There have been improvements to ARM64 KVM that improve stability and correctness of virtualizations on ARM64. There are also improvements to RISC-V KVM and Trust Domain Extensions (TDX) for Intel which expand and secure virtualization capabilities on those architectures. On the graphics front, there are fixes for the amdgpu and amdkfd drivers that fix job handling, engine resets, display corruption, and power management features. The driver used for Qualcomm’s Adreno GPUs has been updated to improve fault handling, display timing, and driver binding. The open-source Nouveau (Nvidia) driver has been updated with fixes for GSP message queue references, potential integer overflows, buffer size adjustments, and a use-after-free bug. Finally, the Intel i915 driver has been updated to address early wedge issues, memory initializations, and build errors. There are also improvements to Wi-Fi devices (ath12k and iwlwifi), sound (ALSA), power management on AMD, and file system improvements (OverlayFS, EROFS, XFS, NFS, SunRPC). Linux 6.16 is due for release at the end of July and will then be picked up by Linux distributions, which will be the first interaction most end users have with the new features in this update. The main benefit of a newer kernel is that Linux will work on newer hardware, so if you’ve had issues with Linux, be sure to try it periodically in case your hardware is now supported.
    • Technically, it should be account-bound after activating it
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      urbanmopdubai1 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Jim Dugan earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • First Post
      Johnny Mrkvička earned a badge
      First Post
    • Week One Done
      viraltui earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      serfegyed earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      649
    2. 2
      Michael Scrip
      226
    3. 3
      ATLien_0
      218
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      150
    5. 5
      Xenon
      145
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!