To beauty and fame! #success #growth #justindalton #justindaltonphotography #hawaii #myfavorite #whereisyours #takemesomewhere #photography #travelblogger #blognow #liveup (at Grand Wailea, A Waldorf Astoria Resort)
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To beauty and fame! #success #growth #justindalton #justindaltonphotography #hawaii #myfavorite #whereisyours #takemesomewhere #photography #travelblogger #blognow #liveup (at Grand Wailea, A Waldorf Astoria Resort)
From Feedly: Apple needs single sign-on to solve the tvOS adoption problem
From Feedly: Apple needs single sign-on to solve the tvOS adoption problem
Paul Müller
Crunch Network Contributor
Paul Müller is CTO and co-founder of adjust where he oversees building and scaling the company’s app attribution and analytics platform.
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Just ahead of Apple’s recent annual Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) held in San Francisco, we looked at the performance of tvOS apps. Analyzing…
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From Feedly: New Pokémon Go maps show you where to catch 'em all
From Feedly: New Pokémon Go maps show you where to catch ’em all
If you’ve been wondering how to find Pikachu, Scyther, Electabuzz, or any other rare Pokémon, you might not have to wait much longer: new crowdsourced Pokémon Go maps are teaching players how to find Pokémon in Pokémon Go.
At least four Pokémon Go maps are available: the first, at Pokecrew.com, zeroes in on your location and begins showing what Pokémon might be nearby. And if you happen to live…
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We’ve just added a new short story to the Destination Pandaria section of the official World of Warcraft website: Death from Above.
New World of Warcraft Short Story: Death from Above http://bit.ly/15pRk6O
We’ve got some new stuff coming to the Pet Store, and we wanted to give everyone a quick sneak peek. Obviously, the Pet Store has been the place where we sell pets and mounts, but we’ve come up with some new types of cosmetic goodies, including some fun new little toys and Transmogrifiables.
New Stuff Coming to the Pet Store! http://bit.ly/15pRivJ
Hey, Cricket customers! You’re about to become AT&T customers. AT&T has just announced that they’ve agreed to acquire Leap Wireless, the parent company behind Cricket Wireless. As part of the deal, AT&T will be acquiring all of Leap’s towers, stores, and all 5.3 million of their subscribers. If the deal goes through, this will bump AT&T from 107 million subscribers to 112 — still just behind Verizon in the battle for the biggest US carrier. AT&T says that they plan to pay $15 dollars per share. With 79 million Leap shares outstanding, this works out to just short of $1.2B. Developing…
AT&T To Acquire Leap Wireless (Cricket) For Around $1.2B http://tcrn.ch/18SJ6d3
When it comes to third-party calendar and to-do apps, the App Store is flush with possibilities. But that doesn’t mean there isn’t room for improvement or experimentation. Cal, Any.do’s new calendaring app, attempts to show you your schedule in a way that lets you maximize your free time during a day. I took the app for a brief spin on Wednesday; here are some of my initial impressions. Easy setup Cal is a pleasure to get started with; you just press a few buttons to import your calendar settings and grant access to your contacts and you’re ready to go. You can toggle which calendars you’d like visible, set your default calendar for new events and your default list for new reminders, and when the week should start (Sunday or Monday). Pretty pictures, clean interface
Hands on: Any.do's Cal is a clever, sleek little calendar app http://bit.ly/132tgZ5
With all the advances and conveniences that iOS offers, there’s one place that OS X continues to trump Apple’s mobile platform: automation. But with the appearance of IFTTT for iPhone, that gap is perhaps narrower than it once was. If you’re not familiar with its Web service, IFTTT stands for If This Then That. Even those not intimately familiar with programming should get the basic idea here: If a pre-determined condition is met, then an action is taken. On the Web, IFTTT integrates with a number of popular services (which it dubs “channels”), including Twitter, RSS, Google Talk, Evernote, Pocket, and more. IFTTT’s app is, unsurprisingly, more limited than its Web service, but it does bring access to new channels by integrating with three services available on your iPhone: your contacts, your reminders, and your device’s photos. That way you can, for example, set up a recipe that automatically uploads your iPhone’s pictures to Flickr. While the integration with your phone’s own data is somewhat limited, the other services that IFTTT offers on the iPhone are extensive—I counted several dozen. Each channel has a variety of options assigned to it, depending on whether it’s the trigger or the action. You can create workflows, or “recipes” in IFTTT parlance, which can then be shared with others. Generally, you need to activate channels, either by entering your credentials for that service, or—on with phone-specific data—by allowing access to that particular information. To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here
Hands-on: IFTTT for iOS automates your online life http://bit.ly/14LHw8l