Thursday, September 9, 2010

Hi, recently I have been hearing from many people that marketing websites really do give out free gifts. All you are required to do is one free offer and refer some friends and you can receive your free iPad, iPhone 4 etc. the website most people have been referring to is www.free-apple-gifts.co.uk – For those that have used this website before, what do you think? have you got your free gift?

Would this website really give me a free iPad?

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Save our Planet and Win a free iPAD, 32335 | Online Classified Ads …

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I know a neighbor who got a free iphone online from a promotion that took place 2 weeks back. I have checked with the site and they arent doing any new promotions yet. Anyone got any idea who holds this promotions and which one is reliable?

I am looking for a good place to get a free ipad is there any promotions going on for that?

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We are very excited to announce the launch of Digg’s official app for the iPhone. This free app was designed to create a seamless browsing experience between Digg and the most popular content on the web, as chosen by the Digg community. we wanted to make it easy to discover interesting content on your phone and to easily jump into the conversations around that content. you can browse lists of recent content, search for the topics you care about, and save stories to check out later. Best of all, you can join in on the curation by Digging and burying stories and comments right from your phone! Download it now …

This video gives a detailed rundown of all the great features we’ve packed into the app.

The app was created by the talented team over at TapTapTap and showcases a lot of the great things that can be built off the Digg API, including writable endpoints that let developers create fully-featured applications.

To help get the word out, TapTapTap is hosting a contest where anyone can win one of fourteen beautiful Digg iPads, one each day for two weeks, customized by Colorware.

Finally, we want you to know that this is just the first of many things we’re working on in the mobile space. Look for a Digg app for Android soon and we’ll follow up this iPhone release with several iterations which will include improvements based on your feedback. in addition, we’ll be rolling out features on these and other platforms that draw off some of the changes we’re working on for digg.com. We’ve got a lot going on so if you’re interested in joining our mobile development team, please be sure to check out jobs.digg.com.

We know this app’s been a long time coming and we appreciate all the interest and patience we’ve gotten from the Digg community, especially those of you who had to wait a bit for it to be available in the U.S. app store. enjoy and please tell us what you think!

Digg's iPhone app (finally) here – win a custom Digg iPad

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Netflix is a free app for the iPad that will be available on launch April 3rd. If you’re a netflix subscriber you can watch instantly anything in Netflix’s online collection directly on your iPad. You can stream TV shows and movies just like you would on your computer.

You can watch as often as you want as it’s part of the Netflix unlimited membership if you have it. You can resume watching where you left off on your computer. You can also browse and manage your quenee from the app.

This is the official app from Netflix that is completely free, more interested in the iPad yet?

It’s Official as seen From Our iTunes Store Database: http://appadvice.com/ipad-app/363590051

Exclusive : It’s Official – Netflix Will Stream on iPad

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Full Apple iPad Keynote (7 of 9)

Posted by On May - 11 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

January 27, 2010 — Apple released the iPad at their “Come See Our Latest Creation” keynote. the iPad was the main and only focus of the event. Unfortunately the Macbook Pro did not get an update :’( Tags: Apple official announcement news big day wwdc 2010 2009 new tablet rumors fact release date macrumors iphone 4g iwork imovie ipad ipod iphone capacitive shuffle classic touch nano mac imac macbook pro update ifail iplod camera mac mini macbook air apple tv osx os ten snow leopard software games magic mouse wifi 3g 3g 3gs ibook ibookstore itunes app store iMac 27 inch 21.5 flicker Mac air powerbook g1 g2 g3 g4 g5 steve jobs return random tags to get more views lol.

Full Apple iPad Keynote (7 of 9)

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Any TV show, on any screen, anytime. Free, or at least reallyreally cheap. That’s the dream.

The two most obvious, potential avenues for this dream of cheap, awesome TV anywhere, anytime are iTunes and Hulu. Let’s review: Apple’s reportedly been greasing the wheels with the major broadcasters and networks for an iTunes subscription deal that would net you a bundle of your favorite TV shows from various networks for $30 a month—killing your cable plan. They’re also trying to sell big TV on selling shows for a buck a pop, like music. and they’re trying to line these deals up in time for the iPad launch. Hulu, a joint venture between NBC Universal, News Corp (read: Fox) and Disney (read: ABC) is awesome—a huge way savvy US residents can catch on 30 Rock and most other TV they wanna watch—and it too reportedly wants to be on more screens than your computer monitor, even if it freaks out a bit when somebody tries to put up on your TV.

The problem, of course, is money. In iTunes’ case, it’s obvious where the issue is: Selling TV shows for 99 cents not only makes less money per episode, but even if the revenue drop is made up by boosted volume, people’s perceptions of what a TV show is worth will change. TV shows are expensive. A TV show like Terminator: the Sarah Connor Chronicles costs millions an episode to make. so does mad Men, and it’s not like there are explosions and killer cyborgs in between shots of whiskey and smoking. You thinking that a TV show is worth just a buck, the networks do not want. the Jersey Shore may cost significantly less, and indeed, it’s that kind of disposable, cheap-to-make reality and game shows that the networks would possibly even consider hawking for a dollar a pop. but then the fear still lingers—not everybody realizes that it costs more to dress Don Draper than Pauly D.

The cable-killing subscription Apple’s proposing doesn’t just frighten the networks, it irks the cable operators and the ISPs who are no doubt selling you TV too—the AT&T U-Verse and Verizon FiOSes of the world. Instead of spending $100 a month on a gazallion channels, you’d be picking up a bundle of shows you actually like for a third of the price, using the internet access you already have, tying up more of their already crowded pipes, which they complain about (even as they offer fatter and fatter bandwidth, and scare you into buying as much as you can). so the cable companies threaten the networks not to be too loosey-goosey with their content, and along with some networks, come up with their own schemes to solve the problem that we increasingly expect to watch TV on any screen, like Comcast’s Fancast or TV Everywhere or HBO’s new streaming service, all for subscribers only.

But what about Hulu? It’s owned by three of the four major networks, after all. Well, it’s not making enough money. hence talk of paywalls, monthly subscriptions, and other ways to make money, like charging for an iPad app. In fact, it might be worse than we thought—Business Insider hears that execs at one of the networks is complaining that Hulu’s ad team is undercutting the networks ads in a bad way, “hollowing out ad sales.” (Though, duh, they’re cheaper, they’re reaching a smaller, less targeted audience, since advertisers can’t buy ads for particular shows on Hulu, just genres.) either way, the networks want Hulu ads to get more expensive, not less.

So, Apple and Hulu dig for new ways to make money. Apple’s come up with ways to make you watch ads during iTunes shows, possibly to subsidize cheaper or subscription content. Hulu’s continually experimenting with the ads the site runs, looking for ways to charge more for them. and eventually, for Hulu itself.

But all that effort might not pay off, regardless. if anybody could get the networks to bend to new models of television, it’d be Apple, or their own side project. but, they really, really want you to keep on watching on your TV, like a normal red-blooded American. Hulu and cheap TV shows on the iPad, and everywhere else would be awesome. For now though, you’re better off just hoping.

Send an email to matt buchanan, the author of this post, at matt@gizmodo.com.

The Problem With Hulu, the iPad and Cheap TV

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War between Internet Giants – Amazon Kindle Slaps Apple Ipad

Posted on 14. Mar, 2010 by admin in Uncategorized

Amazon Kindle advertisement appeared on their home site – Amazon.com, Announcing – Free 3G wireless and no Monthly contracts. Apple is pretty famous for binding it’s clients with yearly contracts and charging where it’s not worth it.

People in Asian countries often freak out when they hear Apple giving out iphone for cheap prices like – 99$ which is followed by a frown when they hear about the ATT / Verizon contract to which they must abide to.

Amazon’s this move must boost their sales, at least as per my prediction.

Here are few cons to Apple Ipad -

No Mobile phone Integrated

In short – no everything – The list of features Apple offers in all of its products. I don’t think anything except the IMAT would be able to offer what the users demand.

Here are the cons to Amazon Kindle :

No – To all IPAD features except reading ebooks.

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War between Internet Giants – Amazon Kindle Slaps Apple Ipad

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At some point in all the euphoria, you may also have wondered whether this device is just a trophy or something you can actually use.

Such self-doubts can be easily cast aside, providing you delve a little more deeply into the App Store than the top 100 list — and are ready to open the wallet again.

If you budget around $100 for a few new and upgraded apps, you can easily make the iPad into much more of a constant companion than something you just trot out when the neighbors are watching.

Start with productivity apps, because a mobile device is most valuable when it lets you work anytime, anywhere.

The big knock against smartphones is that you can’t effectively view or edit a Word document or Excel spreadsheet or read a PowerPoint presentation or PDF on something with a puny screen. on the iPad, you can at least read PDFs and, with a little more work, Office files, with the GoodReader app ($1). Air Sharing HD ($10) reads PDFs and helps you organize and print other Office files easily from the iPad.

If you want to edit Office files, you’re on thinner ice. the only iPad-specific apps for that task this week were the Pages, Keynote and Numbers apps from Apple ($10 each), the company’s answer to Word, PowerPoint and Excel.

The apps earned high ratings from users, but also some complaints about how poorly they worked for importing PowerPoint files or for exporting Excel files edited in the Numbers app. Heavy users of these applications should closely read those caveats.

Outside of work, dozens of other apps will help you turn the iPad into a go-to device.

For instance, you can find, manage and share recipes with the Epicurious app and watch movies or manage your queue with the Netflix app. Both are stellar, and both are free.

Check the weather and watch high-definition videos on the Weather Channel Max (also free), which is so nicely designed it puts the iPhone version to shame.

You can catch up on news with the New York Times Editors’ Picks, the Wall Street Journal, USA Today, Reuters or BBC News. These, too, are free, although you will need a Wall Street Journal subscription to use the app.

They all offered good browsing experiences, but in some cases, the articles were more pleasant to read on the companies’ Web sites. with the Times’s app, for instance, you can’t pinch and pull the screen to enlarge photographs.

Meanwhile, if you’re interested in the future of education, buy the Elements app ($14), an interactive guide to the periodic table.

The app’s developers were shooting to create a book Harry Potter might have read, and they scored. the graphics are stunning, and you can spin them with your fingertip anytime you want a little endorphin buzz.

Tutorials read as if they came from the world’s wittiest chemistry teacher.

Other book publishers are finding innovative ways to mix fun with learning. the free “Toy Story” app highlights a narrator’s spoken words — or yours, if you record your voice. It also plays songs from the movie and offers a virtual coloring book for each page.

Miss Spider’s Tea Party ($10) is even more refined, with characters that speak or make noises when tapped.

Then there are always games. some notable games specifically for the iPad include Flight Control HD ($5), Mirror’s Edge ($13), Super MonkeyBall 2 — Sakura Edition ($10), Real Racing HD ($10), Scrabble ($10), N.O.V.A. Near Orbit Vanguard Alliance ($10) and Uno ($7).

Artists will love Autodesk’s Sketchbook Pro ($8) or Brushes ($10). Budding musicians will love Nota ($8), and more experienced ones will go for Pianist Pro ($10) and Tab Toolkit ($10).

Sports fans will want the M.L.B. at Bat 2010 iPad app ($15).

And travelers can download Flight Track Pro ($10), which lets them monitor their flights and quickly find alternatives, or 1,000 Experiences from Lonely Planet ($10), a graphically rich look at a wide variety of trips.

Lonely Planet cut the price for its app in half after a few days, which is a telling development. IPad developers started with prices that were often much higher than iPhone versions of the same software, based on logic that no one has yet unearthed.

As competition builds in the App Store, that logic should fade quickly.

E-mail: tedeschi@nytimes.com

With Select Apps, iPad Is More Than a Pretty Face

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By Katie Marsal

Published: 03:50 PM EST In addition to new App Store software, National Public Radio and The Wall Street Journal also plan to create specific versions of their Web sites completely devoid of Adobe Flash for iPad users.

This week Peter Kafka with MediaMemo revealed that both NPR and the Journal will convert at least some portions of their Web site to load properly on the iPad. The custom-built sites will feature the same content and run concurrently with the traditional and iPhone/mobile-friendly versions of each Web site.

“Visitors to the newspaper’s front page will see an iPad-specific, Flash-free page,” Kafka said of the Journal’s iPad Web site. “But those who click deeper into the site will eventually find pages that havent been converted.”

The news comes weeks after Virgin America revealed it dropped Flash content from its new Web site in order to allow users with iPhones to check in for flights.

But the Journal and NPR are both also creating App Store software specifically for the iPad, suggesting that content providers are taking a multi-pronged approach to Apple’s forthcoming multimedia device. Kinsey Wilson, head of digital media for NPR, declined to give Kafka an advance look at the organization’s forthcoming iPad application or Web site, but did provide a hint as to what the experience could be like.

“Wilson says that while iPhone apps are a ‘very intentional experience’ –you load the thing up and seek out specific content — he thinks the iPad will be a ‘lean back device,’” Kafka wrote. “That’s traditionally the distinction multimedia types use to differentiate between a computer and a TV. Intriguing.”

The exclusion of Adobe Flash from the iPad and subsequent comments attributed to Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, in which he allegedly called the Web standard a “CPU hog,” have led to a considerable amount of debate over its merits and shortcomings.

Contributing to the conversation in January was Google, which added support for rival format HTML5 to the most popular video destination on the Internet, YouTube. The beta opt-in program is available only for browsers that support both HTML5 and H.264 video encoding. Apple, too, has placed its support behind HTML5.

For more on why Apple isn’t likely to add support for Flash in the iPhone OS, read AppleInsider’s three-part Flash Wars series.

NPR, WSJ will be Flash-free Web sites for Apple iPad

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