Saturday
Oct182014

iLife suite for Mac updated with OS X Yosemite support

Apple has updated the iLife suite of apps to better work with the new OS X Yosemite OS which launched last Thursday. Composed of iMovie, iPhoto and Garageband, the iLife apps are getting updated user interface elements and various new features plus Yosemite's iCloud Drive support which enables sharing larger projects among collaborators through the cloud.

This means larger files can be sent over email via iCloud's new Mail Drop feature. These updates are apparently only for Yosemite as the App Store states that Compatibility is stictly OS X 10.10 or later. The Photos app, which Apple demoed previously as a blend of iPhoto and the now discontinued Aperture, will surface in 2015. In the meantime, Aperture users also get a Yosemite update to tide them over until next year.

Saturday
Oct182014

Canadian Reviewer Weekly Roundup 10/12-10/18

Saturday
Oct182014

Yahoo unveils new Flickr app for iPad

Yahoo-owned Flickr used to only be available on iPhones on iOS operating system. Now, it has a new iPad app that can support the Retina display of the old iPad Air and iPad mini as well as the new iPad mini and iPad Air 2. However, Flickr 3.2 app will only work with iOS 8. What you will get is the ability to see “up to 3,000,000 pixels per photo.” That number is roughly the amount of pixels on the devices’ 2048 x 1056 screens. You can view your Flickr feed in landscape and portrait, take photos with your iPad, and add live filters and histogram to your shots.

Source: VentureBeat | Download: Apple iTunes App Store (Free)

Saturday
Oct182014

Pocket Casts introduces Web player for podcasts

If you are looking to continue listening to podcasts while you’re on your desktop, Pocket Casts is making things easier for you with its new Web player. It syncs with the Android and iOS versions of the app, which means you can see the podcasts you’ve subscribed to. It also shows you what you’ve listened to and what’s in progress. Of course, it will help you find new things to listen to as well. The great thing about the Web player is it will pick up where you left off with the mobile apps. However, if you’re looking for more advanced features, you won’t find that there. Plus, you have to be willing to shell out US$9. You can try it out for free with the app’s 14-day free trial.

Source: Lifehacker