The iPhone app, which CEO Zuckerberg says nearly every iOS device owner uses, gets updated Places support, Groups feature, including the ability to add photos to check-ins and better tagging.
The much anticipated Skyfire web browser for iPhone, iPad and iPod touch is now available for download! It was originally expected to go live this Thursday, but for whatever reason, it looks like they have released it today as it is now available on the US iTunes App Store !
Apple has already seeded the final Gold Master version of iOS 4.2 to developers. Public release is looming near. Once the new firmware is out, Apple will stop signing the old firmware, which will make it impossible for you to get SHSH blobs for iOS 4.1.
Table Connect for iPhone is a 58” multi-touch screen that connects directly to your iPhone (hopefully iPod touch / iPad as well) so you can use the iPhone directly on the table.
Skyfire, which is already available for Android, Symbian and Windows Mobile (WP7) has been approved for Apple’s App Store.
Apple has just released the final GM (Gold Master) version of iOS 4.2 to developers! Only members enrolled in the iPhone Developer Standard or Enterprise Program can access these bits by signing into iOS Dev Center (aka Apple Developer Connection).
Research firm Canalys today reports that iPhone is the most popular smartphone in America whereas Android is the most popular smartphone OS (in Q3 2010).
An alarm clock bug in iOS is causing major punctuality issues across Europe with alarms set with iPhone going off one hour later than the designated time.
The recently released VLC app for iPhone, and the iPad version may soon be gone from the App Store, reports, TUAW. The developers behind the popular VLC Media Player claims that the iOS version of VLC available in the App Store is “violating GNU public license under which VLC is released by applying DRM to it”.
Yes you read that right! As the title suggests, you can now enable HD video recording on your jailbroken iPhone 3GS, running iOS 4.x. ARM Cortex processor on iPhone 3GS is apparently capable of handling 720p video encoding, it is just that Apple has imposed some limitation in the software which Mike has successfully managed to bypass to allow video recording at 1080×800 @ 30fps at up to 20Mbps. The default settings for video recording on iPhone 3GS are: 640×480 @ 3Mbps.

