There never seems to be an absence of really great reference applications landing on the iPad’s doorstep. Just as we begin to beg for the next cool thing, some slick company pushes out their latest discovery service which allows us to further interact with our favorite content. Discover by Cooliris, like Flipboard, transforms Wikipedia into a unique magazine experience that’s irresistible to touch.
Discover for iPad is the Flipboard for Wikipedia
Safari Extensions Monday: Sessions, KeySearch, Instapaper in Google Reader
I spent a week using the latest Firefox 4 Beta and now I’m back to Safari. I can’t help it, but Safari has the best support for 1Password out there and that, combined with amazing tools such as ClickToFlash, is too valuable to me. If you add stability, speed and elegance to the mix - I guess you know what I mean.
So, Apple launched the official Safari Extensions Gallery last week, and there are more than 100 “officially approved” extensions in there. It’s a good place to discover new stuff, but I’m wondering how often Apple will update it. Anyway, I’ve just installed three new extensions to start the week, and they’re pretty great.
Office for Mac 2011 Pricing and Release Date Announced
Microsoft has announced the official pricing and release for Office: Mac 2011. The new version will ship in late October (just before the holiday season) and will be available in three different versions: Home and Student, Home and Business, Academic. Check out the details below.
Manufacturing Change to White iPhone 4
It’s easy to wonder what the hell is going on with the iPhone 4. You’d think there wouldn’t be much of a difference between the black and white models asides from color, but WhiteiPhone4Now reports that the OEM producing the front frame recently changed their manufacturing process; the frame previously wouldn’t sit flush with the steel band, though that issue is now resolved. Click past the break for a shot of the original damage done.
[via WhiteiPhone4Now]
iOS 4’s Nasty Calendar Bug
I’m looking out for our calendar users this morning suffering from iOS 4 woes. For those dealing with scrambled or blank events in the list view, iTWire quickly details how the problem may be remedied:
Some solutions are showing up. Our calendar is hosted by Google and uses CalDAV to sync to the iPhone. By going into the account settings and deselecting the “Birthdays” calendars the List View is correctly refreshed. So, it would seem that one of the default calendars created by the operating system is to blame.
Neowin suggests that entries older than six months old are also to blame, so you should archive older entries if you can. Though if you’re connected to an Exchange server, there’s not much you can do to fix the issue other than submit your standard Apple feedback report.
The iPhone 4 Around the Globe [Spoiler: Don’t Buy One in Italy]
So you want to purchase an unlocked iPhone 4 in some foreign country. Sounds good, I did the same with mine - and I bought it from an Italian seller who bought it in France and sold it for 200 Euros more. Not a great story, but I needed it. Anyway, iFun put together an interesting chart showing the prices of the iPhone 4 around the world.
It turns out, Italian iPhones are the most expensive. Hong Kong ones are the cheapest. Check out the image below (click for full size). But don’t buy one in Italy.
Removr for iPhone
I don’t have many games on my iPhone and iPad, but I enjoy sitting down and play something every once in a while. I loved Canabalt, I bought Real Racing when Firemint introduced Retina Display support, I was a die-hard Orbital fan. Oh, and I download the eBoy game, too.
A few days ago I bought a new game in the App Store, Removr.
JailbreakMe: The Good, The Bad and The Pointless
A few hours ago @comex finally released his universal jailbreak tool for iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad called “JailbreakMe”. Unlike many previous jailbreak tools released in the past three years, this time you don’t need a computer to install Cydia on your device: jailbreakers are using the cloud now, and all you have to do is visit a website in Mobile Safari and wait for the exploit to “land” on your home screen.
Of course Apple isn’t happy about jailbreak. They never were. But this time - this time they have a pretty big issue on their hands. JailbreakMe seems to be based on a PDF vulnerability that is activable in Safari and, potentially, could lead to malicious software sent to users via emails and the browser.
Today’s List Winners Announced
Thanks everyone who entered the Today’s List giveaway. We also want to thank the Random Accident developers for the promo codes they offered to MacStories readers.
Here are the winners:
AsceticMonk
Alexander Melton
You’ll receive the promo codes in your inbox in a few minutes. Congratulations!