Monthly Archives: June 2009

6 audiobook classics for under a dollar

One thing the iPhone has done is give a boost to audiobooks. They are a great way to pass the time while driving, sitting in an airport, or taking a long commute.

Audio Classics [App Store] is a US$0.99 app that contains 6 public domain books professionally read by a narrator. The app runs on both the iPhone and the iPod touch. The books include:

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
(the original story that inspired the recent movie)
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
The Time Machine
The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Aesop’s Fables (141 of them)
A Christmas Carol

Safari Browser 3.0 for iPhone is GPS-aware

One of the relatively unsung features of the upcoming iPhone 3.0 firmware is that the new version of Safari for iPhone will use geolocation. This means that the browser can request location information from the iPhone’s GPS receiver, and can also provide that location information to websites that you’re visiting.

ComputerWorld’s Seth Weintraub reports that the beta versions of the firmware are working well with sample web-aware websites. This capability is not only planned for the iPhone’s implementation of Safari, but many upcoming browsers for Mac as well.

Geolocation capabilities make it simple for developers to create web apps that no longer need to ask you for an address or zip code. Google, for instance, is planning on making their Latitude application a 3.0-only web app rather than a standalone application on the iPhone. Latitude will leverage the geolocation features of Safari by knowing exactly where you are at a particular point in time and sending that info to the Latitude servers, then returning the whereabouts of your friends while informing them where you are.

Japanese university tracking students via free iPhones

Filed under: , , , ,

If you happen to be enrolling in Aoyama Gakuin University’s School of Social Informatics in Tokyo this year, make sure to stop by the admissions office to pick up your free iPhone — the school made a deal with Softbank Corporation, the iPhone’s vendor in Japan, to give the phones to 550 students for school usage. But oh, there is one catch: they’re also going to use the phones’ GPS to track students, and make sure they’re attending class on time.

It looks like skipping class is an issue — the students at the school, despite having to answer an attendance check and/or hand in an attendance card, are still skipping out on class and having their classmates cover them. But apparently university officials think the iPhone plan will work better, because students will be less inclined, they believe, to pass off their iPhone to a buddy.

Pages: Prev 1 2 . . . .43 44 45 46 47