Tim Cook besöker Bild-redaktionen i Berlin


Lagom till Steve Jobs 60-årsdag besökte Apples vd idag redaktionen på tyska tabloidjätten Bild.

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”Apple Pay är på väg till Europa”


Redan om några månader ska du kunna betala med Apples mobila plånbok i vår del av världen.  

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Facebook Messenger adds quick and easy sharing with new extension

Facebook has updated their Messenger app, adding a sharing extension. The sharing extension lets you share photos, videos, and more with your Facebook friends without needing to enter Messenger itself. As with other share extensions, open the share m…

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Samsung ska tillverka minnen åt Apple


Höstens modeller av Iphone kommer troligtvis att förses med snabba LPDDR4-minnen.  

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Forge is an iPad storyboard for your creativity

Most sketching apps on the market focus on single projects and their underlying layers, rather than a canvas of ideas and suggestions. Forge is different.

I’ve long thought the iPad was perfect for rough storyboarding: It’s not an artist’s preferred medium for detail work, but it’s portable, and easy to sketch on, and has plenty of storage space. Forge, built by the folks behind the Jot Touch stylus, invites you to explore a hundred different ideas and sketches in storyboard format, iterating and trashing and reinventing as you go. I’ve been testing Forge for months, and it’s become one of my go-to tools for planning and messing around with creative ideas.

An elegant weapon for a more civilized age

Forge is built on iterative design, and uses the iPad’s multitouch gestures to make it feel as natural as can be. Tap to start a canvas, doodle with the pencil tool, swipe from the right edge of the screen to copy your initial design to a new canvas.

Pinch to view your project storyboard. Pinch again to view all your projects. Drag sketches around the storyboard to rearrange and reposition them. Throw a sketch into the top corners to move it between projects. Iterate off anything.

The process feels smooth and intuitive: It reminds me of drawing on post-its or a legal pad, ripping off pages and tacking them to a wall, and starting anew. It feels free and exciting in a way your run-of-the-mill drawing app doesn’t.

Of course, Forge’s organizational skills are only half the puzzle: An app like this doesn’t work if its drawing tools are subpar. Thankfully, Adonit’s team has built a drawing app that’s anything but subpar: The pencil, ink, brush marker, marker, and airbrush tools are excellently rendered and can easily hold court with apps like Paper. I have a high standard for pencil rendering, and while Forge’s pencil tool doesn’t quite eclipse Paper’s, it’s more than acceptable. Forge also lets you adjust each tool’s brush size — a feature that’s long been on my Paper wishlist.

Moreover, if you want to start a drawing in another app and then bring it into Forge, or work off source material, you can import any image from your camera library. Working on an Apple Car mockup? Pull in images from all the top car competitors or concept cars you’d like to start working from and stick them to your project board. Instantly, you have a reference collage of images at your fingertips.

Intentional limitations

Like Paper, Forge isn’t designed to be a do-everything sketching app. You’re limited to four layers per sketch, and at present you can only export canvases as PDFs or PNGs; you can’t export a full project wall at all. I don’t mind the layer limitation, as idea iteration means I can save old layers for potential later use, but I’d like to see more export options — to Photoshop, perhaps, or exporting an entire wall as a giant PDF for reference.

As a longshot wishlist feature, I’d love to see some sort of third-party collaboration option for project boards: It’d be amazing to start a project, share it with a collaborator via iCloud, then iterate on each other’s sketches — each from our own devices. You can sort of do this now by passing exported sketches back and forth, but you don’t have access to layers, and it requires a messaging component.

Some might take umbrage with Forge limiting pressure-sensitive stylus support to its Jot Touch, but it makes plenty of business sense to me — Adonit’s hardware sales support the company, allow it to release Forge for free, and advertise the Jot Touch to people who may not know about it. Regular capacitative styluses also work just fine in Forge, so you can still take advantage of the majority of the drawing options. Without a pressure-sensitive stylus enabled, Forge varies line width with speed, like many other iPad drawing apps.

Bottom line

If you work in a field that demands iteration — design, costuming, sketching, cartooning, filmmaking — Forge is an incredible tool and one worth playing with. It’s free to download; if you want to create more than two project walls, you’ll have to pay a $4 in-app purchase fee. Any iPad running iOS 8 or later can launch Forge, though I found it worked best on the iPad Air 2.



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Mercedes-Benz chairman isn’t losing any sleep over Apple Car rumors

Dieter Zetsche, the Chairman of the Board of Daimler AG and the head of Mercedes-Benz Cars, doesn’t seem to be concerned about the recent rumors that Apple may be developing its own automobile. In a recent interview, he is quoted as saying, ””If there …

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Microsoft announces new OneDrive API for all of your devices

Microsoft has announced a new API for OneDrive that will make it easy for developers to integrate the company’s cloud storage service into their apps. The API supports all major platforms, including the web, Windows, iOS, and Android. From Microsoft: …

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Pebble presenterar Time

Pebble TimePebble presenterade idag sin nästa generations smarta klocka, Pebble Time. Istället för att lansera den…

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Sid Meier’s Starships coming to iPad and Mac on March 12 for $15

Sid Meier’s Starships, the space-based strategy game that was first announced in mid-January now has a firm release date and price for the iPad and Mac. The latest effort from the legendary game developer and his team at Firaxis Games will be released…

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Första titten: Här är Siri på svenska – och hon talar bättre än väntat


Nu har Apples digitala assistent äntligen lärt sig svenska. Vi installerade betaversionen och gjorde ett första test.

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