Por eso mi duda de si registras un UIUD es "pa siempre" o tienes que volver hacerlo cada año
Estoy con al ipsw descargado, esperándoos![]()
Por eso mi duda de si registras un UIUD es "pa siempre" o tienes que volver hacerlo cada año
Estoy con al ipsw descargado, esperándoos![]()
Por eso mi duda de si registras un UIUD es "pa siempre" o tienes que volver hacerlo cada año
Estoy con al ipsw descargado, esperándoos![]()
Pero ya hay beta disponible??
Extensibility
In catch-up news, iOS will finally allow apps to exhibit the intent / picker-like functionality that has existed in Android since, I don't know, ever, and make actions within an app extensible to other apps. This was widely expected, but it's big news for iOS nonetheless. This means you can take a photo in the camera app and then select an "edit" action and open it in the editor of your choice. Or, send a link from Safari directly to Gmail (yes, iOS really cannot do this right now, except with a few, select apps). Or tap an address on Yelp and open it in Google Maps instead of Apple Maps. More than anything, it means the sharing of content will finally open up on iOS beyond the few apps it currently supports for sharing actions.
This is a major functional addition at the OS level that will dramatically increase the sharing potential and interoperability of applications on iOS and it's something that developers will likely leverage heavily as time goes on, particularly since they've kind of sort of been doing it in Android forever.
Why hasn't iOS had this extremely useful feature to date? Who really knows.
iTunes / App Store family sharing, app bundles
Realizing that many families share not just devices and platform but apps themselves, Apple's new family sharing feature is actually pretty nice. It allows up to 6 people in a family group, all under the same credit card (not clear if that means same account), to share and manage all content they buy and download from iTunes and the App Store. Permissions can be delegated such that a family leader has to authorize purchases for certain group members (children), so that the chance of Johnny racking up $800 in Candy Crush debt is greatly diminished. For families, this feature will undoubtedly be very useful, so long as it's intuitive enough to use that people will take the time to enable it.
All content purchased from iTunes or the App Store can be shared among family members, so there's no need to pay twice. This will understandably miff content creators and developers a bit, as it reduces their chance to double-dip in the same household, but it makes a lot of sense and sounds very convenient.
Android does not currently have a comparable feature, though Android tablets do have multi-user support while the iPad does not (though iOS does have the "restrictions" system that can be very useful when handing your devices off to young children).
One last tidbit was app bundles, which allows developers to sell their applications in bundles for a reduced price to buyers. This is basically about getting developers more money, and the potential for abuse, if you ask me, is damn high - this could turn into a free-for-all in the casual gaming arena, with developers selling "bundle packs" of crappy content add-ons to squeeze money out of players.
iOS 8 WebKit changes finally allow all apps to have the same performance as Safari
When iOS 7 launched, developers discovered that their apps with built-in web browsers were unable to achieve the same level of JavaScript performance as the stock Safari app. This was because Apple restricted use of its improved Nitro JavaScript engine to its own app, leaving third-parties with a slower version.
“
A few teasers: API is the same across iOS and OS X, and the new WKWebView on iOS is running JS just as quickly as Safari.
—
Vicki Murley (@vickimurley) June 03, 2014
As of iOS 8, however, it seems that decision has been reversed. All apps will now be able to use the same improved JavaScript engine that powers Safari. That means Google’s Chrome browser on iOS will now be just as quick as Safari, as will the pop-up browsers embedded in apps like Twitter and Facebook.
a tomar polculo, instalando!
Como el año pasado. Betas en el iPhone sin problemas. En el iPad, toco lo menos posible
CARPE DIEM![]()
Claro que lo explicaron, pero es el mayor cambio en el funcionamiento de iOS ¡¡¡ Y AQUI NADIE DIJO NADA !!!
Lo del teclado es una anécdota comparado con esto
![]()