Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Remains of the Day: Motorola Promises Jelly Bean for Most Devices, $100 Credit to Everyone Else [For What It's Worth]

Remains of the Day: Motorola Promises Jelly Bean for Most Devices, $100 Credit to Everyone Else Motorola Promises to try and put Jelly Bean on as many devices as they can, Apple denies any involvement in the supposed leak of device IDs, Google Drive spreadsheets get discussion capabilities, and Rdio launches a new privacy feature to keep your guilty pleasures hidden.

  • Motorola Aiming to Upgrade All Possible Devices to Jelly Bean, Promises to Give You $100 Credit if it Can't At today's Motorola event, the company promised that they will try to push out Jelly Bean to as many of their devices as possible. For the devices that don't get updated to Jelly Bean, Motorola is promising a $100 credit for those with incompatible phones to use on upgrading to the company's new handsets that they announced today. [Engadget]
  • Google Drive For iOS Will Soon Get In-App Editing, Ability to See Presentations Due to a blog post that accidentally published, it looks like Google will be bringing in-app editing to its Google Drive iOS app, as well as the ability to view Google Presentations. The Android version is also getting some updates, including the ability to create folders and move documents between folders, as well as upload files to specific folders. [TechCrunch]
  • Apple: We Didn't Give FBI Any Device IDs After the leak of 12 million Apple device IDs yesterday from the FBI's database, Apple is saying that they never gave these IDs to the FBI, and the FBI says that there was never a breach in the first place. In any case, Apple has said that they're getting rid of UDIDs in iOS 6. [AllThingsD]
  • Google Spreadsheets, Now with Discussions Google is adding discussion capabilities to its spreadsheets in Google Drive. Users can now hover over cells marked by orange triangles to see full discussions and reply to comments. [Google Drive Blog]
  • Now Available on Rdio: Protected Accounts Rdio has launched a new privacy feature to keep your guilty-pleasure hits from being seen publicly. Rdio accounts are public by default, so to change this, just go to the Advanced tab in Settings. This will allow you to approve new followers before they can look at your profile and music choices. [Rdio Blog]

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/zAlPtlcZDQM/remains-of-the-day-motorola-promises-jelly-bean-for-most-devices-100-credit-to-everyone-else

occupy congress juan williams victor martinez alcatraz cruise ship martin luther king jr. zappos

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.