iPad

From the latest news to the most comprehensive tutorials, learn how to get the most out of your iPad with our step-by-step guides and expert tips.

Man Offers to Trade Weed for iPad on Craigslist

Do you want an iPad so bad that you're willing to do anything to get one? If so, don't be as stupid as 20-year old Jacob Walker who published an ad on Craigslist offering a quarter of chronic and an iPod Touch in exchange for a 32GB iPad.

As if the description of the ad wasn't enough, Walker also added a picture to his listing, which is probably what caught the local police's attention... After setting up a fake meeting with Walker, the cops arrested him and his buddy.

One question remains though: if the weed was that good, why didn't walker ask for a 64GB iPad 3G. We might never know. [via AZ Family]

Flash on The iPad??

Ok so it's not native yet but we've got another semi-solution for you. For those of you who weren't fans of Smokescreen, comes "Flash in a Pinch"  by Artefact. It gives you another option for getting Flash on your iPad.

Love it or hate it, the fact is there is still a lot of content on the internet that is only available in flash. Take HULU for example. I drool just thinking of Hulu's massive library on my iPad's sexy screen. But unfortunately because the entire site is coded in Adobe Flash and that format is not currently supported in the iPad's web browser, this perfect union may never be.

Now that's not to say that in the future Hulu won't re-encode some or all of its library in HTML5 and enable viewing from iPads and other devices. Personally I think they have a paid/subscription app or service on the way for such devices, but that's neither here nor there.

The fact of the matter is they, like many websites, are currently using Adobe and haven't shown any signs of changing. Now I agree with Apple and Mr. Jobs on this one. Adobe Flash is resource heavy (meaning it drains your battery faster), it has a tendency to crash (taking with it the OS that's running it), and it's got serious security problems. If your company, your brand, Apple, is known for being 'simple' and 'just working', why would you want such an unstable platform running on your devices?

Steve Jobs sums it up pretty nicely on Apple's website with Thoughts on Flash. In the above mentioned article, Steve says "When we see Flash performing well on a mobile device, we'll add support." After years of waiting, they obviously haven't been able to please the CEO in the black turtle neck. Or any other cell phone manufacturer for that matter.

Adobe flash support was originally supposed to ship on phones in late 2008, then 2009, 1st and 2nd half. Some Android phones claim flash support, but most of it is "Flash Lite" that gives limited access to a small number of flash web sites. So it looks like we're playing the waiting game.

Either Adobe has to rebuild flash and fix some serious flaws, or websites like HULU may eventually have to turn to open platforms such as HTML5. Or things could stay the exact same and we'll have to tote around ugly 3 GHz Android phones with no battery life if we want a decent flash on the go experience.

Or, you can try out an alternative solution like smoke screen or Flash in a Pinch. Now neither one of these run natively obviously, but they do enable your iPad to access flash contents. Both use very different back end technology, but essentially accomplish the same thing.

If you checked out the link for Flash in Pinch, you might have caught the video of the iPad running Flash in a Pinch to view what else, the HULU site. You then would have noticed how choppy the frame rates were even on fast broadband to wireless connection. This has to do with the fact that flash is not running natively. The video has to be encoded, sent off to remote servers, decoded, sent back to your device in a compatible format. Whew! No wonder it's so choppy.

The group behind the technology of Flash in a Pinch, Artefact, also claim they can do this with Silverlight and other platforms as well that aren't supported in mobile devices, and they are working on improving frame and bit rate during playback.

Either way you slice it, similar solutions were cooked up for viewing flash on the iPhone and just never seemed to pan out. So between that and that painful video I just watched, chances are I won't be using either product to view flash on my iPad.

I will just have to hold on for an official announcements from one of the big dogs. But hats off to developers. These guys never cease to amaze me. The genius and man hours that went into develop something like this is incredible. The ability is obviously there it just needs some tweaking. Thank goodness people like this exist to keep us from living a black and white world.

My (Belated) First Impressions of the iPad

At the time I started writing this, it was April 27, and it was the first day I had my iPad. A little late to the game you may think, but if you follow this blog on a regular basis, you may know that I was out of the country traveling for the last 7 months.

I took advantage of my return ticket from Brisbane, flew 11 hours to Los Angeles, picked up a 16GB iPad at a nearby Apple Store and jumped in another plane a couple hours later to go to France. That was a wild trip!

During the last 6 weeks, I have been able to use the iPad in all every possible way and today, I think I can give you a honest review of the "magical device".

This Has to Be the Coolest iPad Docking Station Ever

Are you in a retro mood? Or maybe you just want to give your iPad a more classic look? Then check this out.

The guys over at site hirac took a Macintosh Classic, removed the screen and every other component and finally modified the casing so the iPad can fit in there and replace the screen.

It might not be very convenient to use but it sure looks good.

FBI Investigates AT&T’s iPad 3G Security Breach

I told you yesterday about the AT&T iPad 3G security breach that exposed the email address of over 114,000 iPad owners. If this security breach hadn't compromised any politicians and highly ranked military officials, I doubt this issue would have had any legal follow up.

The problem is that the hackers did uncover the email addresses of important people. When I say important, I mean people like New York mayor Michael Bloomberg, or William Eldredge, who commands the largest operational B-1 strategic bomber group in the U.S. Air Force.

Naturally when such high profile people are involved, the FBI started looking into it. According to the WSJ:

"The FBI is aware of these possible computer intrusions and has opened an investigation," said Katherine Schweit, an FBI spokeswoman. Ms. Schweit said the FBI began the investigation Thursday but wouldn't comment on what the bureau is looking at. "It's very early in the investigation," she added.

What's going to happen next? I'm not sure but for some reason I don't think AT&T is going to get in trouble. We'll see what happens in the next few days.

List of iPhone Apps Compatible With FullForce for iPad

A few weeks ago I told you about FullForce, an application that force-selects applications to show in full screen iPad mode, even if the developer hasn’t certified them as compatible.

Danny recently let me know that he and his buddies are working on a list of iPhone apps that are compatible with FullForce on the iPad, rendering them in full screen mode without pixelizing them.

You can also contribute to the list by reporting those apps you have tested in FullForce.

Click here to see the list.

Steve Jobs A Modern Day Willy Wonka?

After Monday's keynote address by one of the most recognized and charismatic people in the industry, I couldn't help but be in awe of Apple's latest creation. It didn't matter that there was no mention of a Verizon iPhone in the works, or that the screen size was gonna stay at a complacent 3.6".

It was all the magic, the way they presented FaceTime and iMovie for the iPhone with HD recording. It was the fact that 9 years ago, this was done in a tiny lecture hall in front of a handful of people when Steve Jobs introduced the first ipod.

Just to think about the type of evolution that has taken place in consumer electronics, mobile phones and media players in particular is mind blowing. And as much as most people hate to admit it, the juggernaut from Cupertino is responsible for a lot of the industries progress. From the iPod to the iPhone and iPod touch, and now more recently the iPad, Apple seems to pick areas in the market where there's not a a dominant leader, and set a standard.

Full touch screen phones were a joke before Apple came in and set a standard, no stylus, no combing the internet for compatible applications. Same can be said for iPad. The tablet industry was made up of heavy, stylus only machines that took up as much space as a regular laptop, so weren't too practical as a notebook substitute.

If you watched the iPad get introduced, one 'buzz' word Steve Jobs kept mentioning was "magic." This was a magic device that completely revolutionized how you could interact with a computer. And even though the naysayers put in their 2 cents, "where's the webcam, where's the usb port, etc." after selling 2 million iPads in the first 60 days, it's safe to say Apple's got another hit on their hands.

And with a slew of tablets scheduled to hit the market later this year, also running mobile phone operating systems (Android, web os anyone?), once again Apple has set a standard in an area that had no definite leader, not to mention, setting the bar awfully high in terms of design and function.

Not only has Apple been a constant leader in the industry, their products have garnered near celebrity-like attention, especially their unreleased ones. As typical before any large Apple event where Steve Jobs is scheduled to keynote, the gadget blogs and mac-focused web sites were swirling with rumors of possible product announcements.

This year even saw a story unfold that captured the world's attention involving a prototype of Apple's new iPhone 4 design in a tale that save for the lack of murder (yet?), would fit right at home on any one of Jerry Bruckheimer's prime time crime shows.

In fact Steve Jobs himself has grown to celebrity status. He was seen attending the Oscar's this year, where his new magical device was used through out the night to read off winner's of various Academy awards. The iPad continued to make cameo's in TV shows and garner attention up to it's April 3rd launch date.

Much like the iPad, the new iPhone stirred up all kinds of discussion among tech blogs and gadget forums alike. What size camera will they use? Will they finally implement multitasking, the prototype appeared to have a front-facing camera, will video calls finally be a main stay here in the U.S.?

We talked about this thing until we were blue in the face, and why? It's simple. Steve Jobs has become a present day Willy Wonka. We all wait outside his factory in Cupertino, and try to imagine what goes on inside. I myself picture an almost Utopian like society where mythical creatures run about amongst wizards who wave their wands and things like iPads just kind of appear.

Whatever your mental image, chances are, yesterday when Steve Jobs took the stage you were glued to your phone or computer, hanging on every announcement Mr. Jobs made about the new iPhone.

And if you weren't one of the millions who tuned in to Macrumors.live or Boy Genius's coverage of the event, you are at least aware of its existence and probably could tell me when the device will become available.

This phenomenon had not become so evident to me until today visiting my local post office, I overheard a clerk who was well over 60 years old (not profiling, just telling you facts) discussing with another senior citizen the problems Steve Jobs had during his keynote yesterday accessing the internet on the new iPhone due to 500+ wifi devices running. Even when Microsoft and Bill Gates were at their peak of domination, they never produced this much media attention.

Call it "magic", call it innovation, call it whatever you want, but just a few days after the announcement of the new iPhone 4, people are already guessing what the next Apple product to receive a refresh will be. A new mac mini? A revamped Apple TV? A "magic" touch pad device? Apple's ability to make something that appeals to everybody due to sexy design and simplicity is only out done by its own way of capturing our imagination and making us "think different."

In fact this is the one company where someone says "what will they think up next?" and your mind really ventures off into the seemingly  impossible because with Willy Wonka and his Cupertino factory, you never know how to answer that question.

Mover+ Transfers Videos, Photos, Contacts and More Between iPhones Over The Air

Last week I told you about myPhoneDesktop, an application that can send images, URLs, phone numbers and text wirelessly to your iPhone from a desktop computer. Today I want to briefly introduce a somewhat similar app called Mover+.

Mover+ is an application that lets you transfer videos, photos, contacts, web bookmarks and text clippings from an iPhone to another, or from an iPhone to an iPad, all this over the air.

If for example you shoot a video at a dinner party with friends, instead of showing the video on the tiny iPhone screen, you can just move it to your iPad for everyone to watch it on a larger screen.

In order for this to work, you have to have Mover+ installed and running on both devices. Put what you want to send on the Mover table, connect via wifi or Bluetooth, and flick it offscreen where you want it to go!

You can download Mover+ from the App Store for $1.99.

Really Cool iPad Magic

Check out this video of a Japanese dude doing some cool magic tricks with his iPad. The trick is not too hard. He's playing a video and his show it timed to the second on this video. It still is a nice and entertaining show.

Wi-Fi Sync Updated for Windows and iPad

A couple of weeks ago, I told you about Wi-Fi Sync, a jailbreak app that allows you to sync your iPhone over wifi. At the time, Wi-Fi sync was only available on Mac OS X.

An update is now available for Wi-Fi Sync that brings support for Windows users, and also for the iPad.

You can get Wi-Fi Sync from Cydia for $9.99. You will also need to install the free software on your computer.

FullForce Forces Your iPhone Apps to Display in Full Screen Mode on iPad

A few days ago I shared with you a hack to make your iPhone apps run in full screen mode on your iPad. This hack requires a few steps that might scare away those of you who don't feel like playing with the core files of applications.

Lucky for us, one of my favorite jailbreak developer, Ryan Petrich, created FullForce, an application that "force selects applications to show in full screen iPad mode, even if the developer hasn't certified them as compatible".

The result? Even if an application like Facebook can't be properly displayed in full screen mode on your iPad, FullForce will work its magic and make the app fit the whole screen without pixelizing it.

You can download FullForce from Cydia for free. Once installed, go to the settings.app and in the FullForce options, select the applications you want to force.

Note that FullForce doesn't work with all applications. Just like the hack, text based apps such as Facebook and Tweetie work best in full screen mode.

FullForce is developed specifically for iPad so it can safely be added to the list of iPad compatible jailbrak apps.

How to Mount An External Hard Drive on the iPad

Yes, you read it right, you can mount an external hard drive on your iPad. This hack isn't the easiest one to perform but it's not very complicated either. If you know your way around Terminal, SSH and the likes, you should be fine.

Maxwell Shay wrote a very good tutorial on how to mount an external hard drive to a jailbroken iPad. I haven't tried it myself but I wanted to share the info with you as I think it's a pretty nice accomplishment. You can read the full tutorial here.

If you try to add an external hard drive to your lovely iPad, let us know how it went by leaving a comment.