All Articles Tagged facebook

Follow Friday: Keep Current with TiPb and the iPhone via Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, or RSS!

header_tipb-follow

In addition to our main iPhone blog, iPhone forums, and iPhone Live! podcasts, there’s a number of other ways you can follow TiPb and get all the latest iPhone news, reviews, and how-tos:

Twitter

You can follow our feed via @theiphoneblog on Twitter, and keep up with our staff including @reneritchie, @backlon (Dieter), @iChadman, and @JFSikora (Jeremy).

Our nimble forum staff can be found at @jamesus, @llofte, @JHamilton24, @justin_horn, @msproductions, @skeetobite

And if you’re on Twitter, you can even show your TiPb colors with this handy, dandy Twibbon! (Yeah, we totally stole this idea from CrackBerry!)

Facebook

TiPb has both a Facebook group and Facebook page. We’re not sure which one is best for helping our readers stay in touch and up-to-date, so if you have a preference, let us know!

LinkedIn

Professional much? Join TiPb’s iPhone group on LinkedIn to network with like-minded mobile accomplishers.

RSS

Subscribe to TiPb’s RSS feed via your favorite reader, add it directly to Google or Yahoo!, or get updates sent directly to your email.



Facebook 3.0 for iPhone Coming Soon. Push Notification Coming Later

Facebook 3.0 for iPhone

Whether the idea of push notification for the iPhone Facebook app makes you want to do a happy dance, or just run screaming for the delete button, according to a recently published note, you won’t be getting it in the 98% completed Facebook 3.0 anyway:

Push Notifications, is in development but it won’t make it into 3.0. You can expect it in a 3.1 update later this summer.

So what will Facebook 3.0 bring? The “new” news feed, ability to “like” status, events with rsvp, notes, pages, better photo management and browsing, a new home screen, fixed comment notifications, SMS and call from friends screen, and auto-save so incoming calls don’t kill your unfinished messages.

[via Facebook, thanks @sil3ntrid3r11 for the tip]

iPhone at South by Southwest (SXSW) 2009 Roundup

South by Southwest (SXSW) 2009 is trendy, twitter-filling, and the source of increasingly social iPhone news releases. What’s going on this year?

FaceBook connect comes to the iPhone. Sure, they may just have redesigned their home pages to basically become Twitter with invitations to apps you don’t want and events on continents you can’t attend, but behind the scenes:

You can now use Facebook Connect on your iPhone in the same way you can for a website. Simply download any application featuring Facebook Connect and log in using your Facebook account from your iPhone. Then, you’ll be able to easily find your Facebook friends. They will be able to see the same profile information as they can on the site, controlled by your privacy settings. You can also share what you’re doing with your iPhone applications with all of your Facebook friends by publishing stories back to your profile.

Pelago has launched Whrrl 2.0:

an application for the iPhone that enables people to capture and share the moments of their lives, as they happen, as a story. Through location, photos and text updates, users can easily turn everyday life experiences into lasting stories that can be remembered, organized and shared. Each user controls exactly who can view their story, ranging from public to private, and includes the option to broadcast status updates on Facebook and Twitter.

SGN Launched Agency Wars, a game tied into — you guessed it! — social networking and Facebook connect!

Agency Wars is capitalizing on the classic spy genre and offeres massively multiplayer game play so you can become the most deadly spy around.

TUAW is also live and on location at SXSW 2009, and have posted up coverage of the iPhone Gaming Panel.

Review: Pinger, the Social Dialer for iPhone

pp_friendnews_fb.jpg

It’s been awhile since we’ve heard anything from Pinger, creators of a service that allows you to trade voicemails like they were emails. Their previous offering was interesting but not ultimately useful for most people. Their new offering, a clever iPhone application (iTunes link) that combines a social media aggregator, a dialer, and an IM client is interesting and likely useful for most people. For me, it addresses my #1 gripe about the iPhone. It’s also free.

Read on for a review!

Read the rest of this entry »


The iPhone blog on Facebook: Phase 2!

A few weeks ago we told you about TiPb’s shiny new Facebook group — a comfy place to de-harshen your mellow and hang with your fellow TiPbsters (TiPbites? Er… we’ll work on that!) on the FB!

Well, we got us some feedback. You wanted some features. You wanted to be able to keep up with news, for example, which is something not easily accomplished in the confines of a “group”. We shoulda made a “page”, you told us (most of us, at least — Chad bashed us over the head with that one about 0.01 seconds in).

Well, we listened. Introducing The iPhone blog’s brand spanking new Facebook Page!

And to celebrate both the launch of our iPhone Live!-Cast and the new page, anyone who becomes a fan of the TiPb’s Facebook Page this week gets one (1) entry into our new contest: the Ultimate iPhone Accessory Pack Give Away (details coming soon!)

So what are you waiting for? Phase 2 has begun!

Join the iPhone blog on Facebook!

Now that Facebook has their snazzy new 2.0 iPhone App, TiPb decided we needed a snazzy new Facebook group to go with it. We’re launching it today, so here’s your one and only chance to get in on the ground floor.

So what are you waiting for? Head on over to Facebook and become a founding member of the iPhone blog group now!

(And don’t forget, you can follow us on the Twitter as well!)

Facebook 2.0 Hits iPhone App Store

Last month, Dieter let us know that Facebook’s popular, but feature-thin App Store application would be getting an update to (hopefully!) bring it up to par with the older WebApp version accessible via MobileSafari browsing. The due date was September, and boy did they just manage to sneak it in under the wire! Check out the iTunes App Store for Facebook 2.0 (still free!).

So what’s in the Facebook 2.0 update?

  • Notifications
  • Full news feed
  • News feed story comments
  • People search
  • Friend requests
  • Photo tagging
  • Photo captioning
  • Photo posts to friends’ walls
  • Full mini-feed combined with the wall
  • Entire inbox, including sent and updates
  • Inbox search
  • Message attachments
  • Speed and stability improvements
Impressions so far? The extra content accessibility is awesome. The UI changes are interesting, especially the horizontally scrolling menu bar under Home, but the visualization of it seems more than a little strange. What do you think? Is it as good as the WebApp yet? As the Facebook website? Has it changed your experience of the social monster? Let us know!

(Thanks to Gregory for sending this in!)

Facebook App for iPhone to Actually Reach Feature Parity with Web Version

small_n6628568379_843650_4606.png

Good news on the Facebook front: their native application is due to get an upgrade in September. The upgrade should actually make the app reach some sort of feature parity with the web-app version of Facebook, which right now is far superior to the native app.

New features include a revamped profiles view, viewing all notifications in the home tab, friend search and approval, the ability to view your full inbox, and more.

Joy!

Read: for iPhone’s Notes

Facebook on the iPhone: 1M Downloaded, “Connect” Service Launched

Face Book Connect for the iPhone

iPhone users sure love them some Facebook. In just two weeks following the launch of Apple’s App Store, Facebook’s Director of Mobile, Jed Stremel announced that the Facebook App for iPhone has been downloaded over 1,000,000 times. Whether those are unique downloads, and whether all downloaders are now using it consistently aren’t known, but Facebook remains in the top-ten list for free apps and doesn’t look to be going anywhere anytime soon.

In fact, last week at Facebook’s f8 conference they announced Facebook Connect, a new framework that would grant other iPhone apps (and their developers) the ability to log onto and use your Facebook account data. Depending on your views about convenience vs. security/privacy, this means you will either enjoy a single and consistent presence across a wider range of apps (one account to rule them all), or be even more paranoid about your personal information getting out of your control (one point of failure to leak it all).

Personally, I have a Facebook account but only visit it when I get an alert or need some info. I have the iPhone app, but like the WebApp before it, find MobileSafari a good enough browser I’ll most often to just go straight to “just the internet” version. And while I’m all for “open social”-esque removal of walled gardens, I think it’s promoting a cavalier attitude towards privacy, and try to remind myself that you can never un-release information.

What about you? Do you use Facebook? Do you use the Facebook iPhone app? What do you think about the idea of Connect?


CTIA: Facebook Talk

Dustin Moskovitz, co-founder of Facebook, gave a great talk today. His talk actually dovetails perfectly with what I wrote last night, that all of these “walled garden” methodologies have got to go. My notes from the talk have been posted up; you’ll see them refined into a story at BerryShack and Crackberry soon enough, I’m sure.

I’ll dig a bit deeper into his talk later today, but the highlight for me is that Moskovitz knows that as computers get smaller, they’ll eat into mobiles. Mobiles will have to become open like computers, or people will start using computers instead of mobiles. As computers miniaturize, that’s just going to be a fact of life.

Facebook-Locked-1
figure 1: this image from Moskovitz’s talk shows the nature of the computer world versus the nature of the mobile world. In the mobile world, everything is locked. Carriers try to monetize various kinds of data over their own network, the OS is locked to everyone, and the hardware is similarly locked, which isn’t what people really want (witness the energy put into hacking openness into the iPhone). The locked-in aspect of the mobile world is also what leads to people thinking of their mobile phone as jsut a landline that they can take with them wherever they go, instead of a mobile computing device. This is a barrier to smartphone adoption.

Facebook-Collision


figure 2: this is Moskovitz’s picture that depicts the collision that’s going to occur in the mobile world as the computer world miniaturizes to the point where the computer hardware makers can put their software and services onto mobile-sized devices that have full computer power.

The other great part is that Moskovitz gave a warning to everyone attending: open up your platform or become obsolete, either by Apple’s hand or Google’s hand. Pick your poison, really. Both of them are looking to either destroy or warp the industry, and to do it from within.

 Page 2 of 2 « 1  2