Free Software Sunday: Genius, helping you memorize academic stuff
It’s Sunday again, meaning it’s time for another edition of Free Mac Software Sunday. In today’s edition of Free Software Sunday, we’re going to show you Genius.
It’s Sunday again, meaning it’s time for another edition of Free Mac Software Sunday. In today’s edition of Free Software Sunday, we’re going to show you Genius.
The weekend activation numbers for Apple’s recent European iPhone launch are finally in. Sadly, at least for Apple, the reported numbers are (un)surprisingly low.
Yes, I know a lot of you care, but the question on my mind is “why upgrade?” So many of you are excited over the prospect of having to spend an hour or more jailbreaking your unit with the new firmware only to get a device less functional than before.
Google doesn’t have a dedicated application for checking email offline as they support various offline clients, but if you’d like a desktop tool to notify you of new and unread messages, look no further than Gmail Notifier.
As you may have noticed, the 1.1.2 iPod Touch/iPhone firmware is finally out, and, as you may also know, it has the tendency to return jailbroken units back to their factory state. I’m sorry, I should’ve reworded that, it had the tendency to return units back to their factory state.
For all you iPhone wielders out there, the 1.1.2 iPhone firmware is officially out. Now the biggest questions on our minds: Does it break our jailbreaks?
AppSnapp, the wonderful, computer-less, one-click iPhone/iPod Touch jailbreak, was just updated with some very convenient, new features.
The AppSnapp update involves a lot of little details, but some of the bigger ones include:
If you’ve held out on jailbreaking your iPod Touch or iPhone because there’s too much work involved, I have good news for you. Would you believe us that jailbreaking your device is as easy as visiting a website?
Something beautiful about Mac OSX is the ability to easily install and uninstall apps. In most cases, all you have to do is copy and paste the app to your desired location. To uninstall, simply delete the program, but apps tend to create all sorts of files and folders that you may not delete along with the program.
Apparently Leopard doesn’t just let you run Windows on your Mac, but now, with a little work, the OS runs on a PC too!