Sunday
Jun162013

Get an iTunes Match-like experience with Dropbox’s Tunebox

Streaming music you keep in your Dropbox to your Apple device has been made possible since 2011 by Tunebox. Now, a new update gives you full offline play support. You can save your files to your device even without a network connection. You can download the app here for $4.99.

Sunday
Jun162013

Facebook to axe Sponsored Results

Earlier this month, Facebook announced they would be reducing the number of their ad units from 27 to less than half of that. Part of that streamlining method is taking out this July the Sponsored Results. You have been seeing these with brands, groups, and searches since August 2012.

Facebook decided to take it out after noticing that marketers used Sponsored Results and mobile app install ads quite similarly. Businesses will still be able to use the latter method along with post link ads.

Sunday
Jun162013

Blogger gets tablet support

Those who make use of Google Blogger know that its app will benefit from a larger screen. But there hasn’t been a native editing space for tablet since the Blogger app was released. That is, until Google finally released this new update.

Blogger now makes use of tablets’ full screens while composing and reviewing posts. Also, WYSIWYG editing is available for current entries, no matter what screen size you use.

Friday
Jun142013

Breaking: MS Office comes to iPhone but 365 subscription is required and nothing for iPad

The much awaited Microsoft Office app has finally come to the iPhone but with caveats.  Users need to have an Office 365 account in order to use it, and there's no version for Apple's iPad, which is the mobile device that would most benefit from having MS Office running natively.

The reason for this could be that Microsoft Office is the key differentiator of Microsoft's Surface RT tablet which is an iPad competitor and which has the only version of MS Office on any mobile tablet. Giving the iPad a version of MS Office would instanly bring it one step closer to its post-PC aspirations but that might mean even less Surface RT sales for Microsoft.