What’s better than using Skyfire on a 3.5-inch screen ? Using it on a 9.7-inch one, of course! After tinkering with the new iPad browser, we’ve noticed that it has the same feel as its iOS brother and Android cousin, with a modified look to it. Features like private browsing, mobile or desktop view and bookmarks remain present — and rest assured, the ability to watch Flash videos is still as easy as tapping a button. What’s perhaps the most salient addition in this rendition is the social network integration. When the app is opened, you’ll notice right away that it’s got eight buttons along the bottom, four of which are Facebook related. These buttons, referred to as “quick view” by the peeps at Skyfire, give you, well, a quick view of the button you’ve tapped. For example, when the Facebook button is pushed, you’re presented with a trimmed down version of the social network. The same goes with Twitter and Google Reader. The app also features Fireplace, which allows you to view specifically the links your Facebook friends have shared, and ‘Popular’, which shows all the related links your friends have shared based on what website the browser parked on, and of course a dedicated ‘Like’ button. The Share function lends you an easy way to share links via various popular networks. As for the browsing experience itself, the devs at Skyfire did a great job ironing out the kinks that we stumbled upon in the iPhone version. Pages render nicely and quickly, pinch-to-zoom works as well as it does on Safari, scrolling is buttery smooth and Flash videos play noticeably quicker in comparison to what we experienced on the iPhone. The app is sadly not available in the App Store just yet, but hang tight, it’s been submitted for approval and should hit virtual shelves soon. Update : Video’s now after the break! Continue reading Skyfire for iPad hands-on (video) Skyfire for iPad hands-on (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Dec 2010 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Image: “Are Oral Contraceptives a Significant Contributor to the Estrogenicity of Drinking Water?” by Amber Wise, et. al. at ACS Publications You may have heard the rumor, or even bought into the popular belief, that taking birth control pills is causing high levels of female hormones in the environment, leading to the feminization of frogs, fish, and other aquatic species. If that is true, you might be thin… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …WASHINGTON — The military’s longstanding ban on service by gays and lesbians came to a historic and symbolic end on Wednesday, as President Obama signed legislation repealing “don’t ask, don’t tell,” the contentious 17-year old Clinton-era law that sought to allow gays to serve under the terms of an uneasy compromise that required them to keep their sexuality a secret. Timeline: The Repeal of ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ Congressional Action on “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” Go to Timeline Blogs The Caucus The latest on President Obama, the new Congress and other news from Washington and around the nation. Join the discussion. FiveThirtyEight: Nate Silver’s Political…
Continue reading …Image credit houseplans.com Dan Gregory, editor of Houseplans.com , writes that Lester Walker, author of American Shelter and a Little House of My Own, now has his plans for sale on the site. It is a lovely little 250 square foot design, from a talented and well known architect. A set of plans costs $ 2500… Read the full story on TreeHugger
Continue reading …Images via Blue Water Satellite Using satellites helps us monitor everything from animal migrations to forest cover to water supply levels. And now Blue Water Satellite has come up with another perfect use — monitoring toxic blooms of blue-green algae in lakes, rivers and reservoirs. Blue-green algae makes news as a foul-smelling killer found everywhere from China to
Continue reading …It’s not iPad nano watch money — seriously, what is? — but with hours to go before the final bell, USB sniffer OpenVizsla has exceeded its initial funding goal by more than 400 percent. That’s over $70,000 as of this writing, with about 510 backers including Stephen Fry, who was pretty vocal about his support (that must help). If you’ll recall, the project — from iPhone dev team and Twiizers virtuosos pytey and bushing — aims to make a cheap USB analyzer that can help decode proprietary devices, the popular anecdote being it’s the same concept used in the Kinect hack how-to . It’s not too late to pledge, of course, and doing so will get you some special goodies. Need more convincing? We’re gonna embed Alma the dog’s video debut after the break. Continue reading OpenVizsla USB sniffer meets its funding goal, and then some OpenVizsla USB sniffer meets its funding goal, and then some originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 22 Dec 2010 11:37:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …Court says two security guards attacked before badly beating up Arabs in Jaffa Port
Continue reading …President Obama signed a landmark law Wednesday morning ordering America’s armed services to let homosexuals serve openly for the first time. (Dec. 22)
Continue reading …Holocaust Remembrance Authority reinstates identity of some two-thirds of Jewish victims. Hall of Names director: Every name rescued is victory over Nazis
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