OreImo iPhone App Update: Kuroneko

The latest update of OreImo iPhone App has been blessed with the ability to purchase a new character for you to touch along while feeling orgasm with some angry or rude voice being thrown out at you. Yes, the new character is Kuroneko.

Kuroneko

Kuroneko

It is expected for them to update the app with Kuroneko. Although the app is remain free for download, the new character is not. To get Kuroneko, you must have a credit card that works for Japan Appstore or iTunes point cards (which I purchased the latter). Priced at 450 yen, the new update also have new functions such as alarm, scheduler and Twitter. Somewhat a major update as they have new character inside. But after awhile, the app is being updated again with…

Maid outfit

Maid outfit

School uniform

School uniform

The other character from Meruru

The other character from Meruru

Each of these is priced at 115 yen. Also, Kirino has additional 5 more outfits (each at the same price). I am still thinking whether I want to get them all considering I just wasted 795 yen for Kuroneko.

P/S: I don’t really think you can use the app on Jailbreak because the App constantly syncing with their server every time I wanted to change the character. Also on other different iOS devices that wasn’t associated with my account.

Apple iPad

iPaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaad

iPaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaad

We just get ourselves an iPad for application development purposes. While you might be wondering why it’s kinda late for getting this baby, it’s mainly due to the budget that finally we got for this. Not really sure what should I try in the first place so I just put inside OreImo App and play around with Kirino.

OreImo iPhone App

Ore no Imouto ga Konna ni Kawaii Wake ga Nai iP

Ore no Imouto ga Konna ni Kawaii Wake ga Nai iP

A clock app for iPhone entitled 俺の妹がこんなに可愛いわけがない iP was released by NamcoBandai Games Inc. on Apple AppStore Japan barely days ago. Featuring Kousaka Kirino as the clock girl where you can interact with her, somewhat. Ok, whenever you ‘touch’ her, she will interact by fidgeting while saying something that you masochist might love to hear. While it’s free, there’s nothing much to expect from this app and for those who are wondering, this is slightly a better app than that of Danny Choo’s Mirai Clock. Continue reading

Windows Live Messenger for iPhone

Yep, Windows Live Messenger is now available on Apple iPhone. Launched a week ago, it took only 5 days to reach 1 million of downloads. As an ardent user of both iPhone and Messenger, I am delighted with this announcement and immediately downloaded and tried it. This is an engineered plan behind Hotmail, Messenger and Windows Live called Messenger Connect (Beta). Like any usual marketing hype, Messenger Connect is being told to us that it allows users to communicate, share, and connect with their Messenger friends on other websites with its flexible, yet prescriptive set of APIs to help create intuitive bla bla bla stuffs. Usual stuffs. In short, it’s just another form of Twitter or Facebook being attached along with internet messenger and email functions. With that being said, your statuses on your Messenger is now acting like Twitter statuses that will be updated on your Live page every time you changed it. It has been that way since before Twitter but nobody seemed to care about it until Twitter. To put it simply, Twitter is more accessible on universal browsers rather than limited availability of Windows Live Messenger application  on Windows operating systems. Well, there’s Messenger for Mac but it sucks badly that nobody bothers to use it. Exactly, what makes this Messenger is so awesome?

First page, the Social tab

First page, the Social tab

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Flash is so yesterday

I started using Flash about 10 years ago. Had little knowledge about it back then since during my school years, Director was my main authoring tool. Well, they’re known as Macromedia products before. Similar to Director, Flash can used on webpages as long as the required plugins are installed on several browsers. Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator were the browsers that I used before and each of them had different plugin installers plus both Director and Flash had different plugins as well (If I am not mistaken, shockwave). I can’t recall much but, yeah, imagine today’s browsers to have different plugin installers for each of them and you need to restart your Windows each time installing them, heh. Of course that the current version of Adobe Flash Player is available for all internet browsers without such fuss.

Flag of Japan. Well, that if Flash conquered the country tho

The reason I bring this Flash matters up is actually because of the way Flash changed our Internet browsing habits. Flash has been used for designing our websites for more than a decade. It has then expanded to other platforms like smartphones. But whenever we wanted to browse a site that uses Flash, you’re required to install the Flash plugin to your system. Especially when suckers like us who wanted to watch YouTube videos on a new computer who will immediately download the installer just for that matter. That’s for computer users like Windows, Mac or Linux. Apple iPhone, Nokia Symbian and Windows Mobile users would have problem viewing webpages that have Flash files. Heck, Sony Playstation Interner browser and Nintendo Wii browser do have the same problem as well. Of course, certain tweaks can be done to make sure that Flash file works on those platforms.

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iPhone 3GS and other stuffs

Aifon Tri-gee-ass

Aifon Tri-gee-ass

Finally, I am getting this baby. Honestly speaking, it’s for my company of course. I ordered the phone like 2 weeks ago, sharp. Yeah, it was on my birthday which I ordered it. The guy said something like I might be getting it about two to four weeks. I got an SMS earlier in the afternoon about this thing and immediately rushed to Berjaya Times Square to pick it up. Oh, I made my order there because I was lurking around Lowyat Plaza at that time to find some Macbooks. So, yeah, around 3 PM I drove from Bangi to BTS with my friend, Amin. As we arrived at the Maxis Center there, I saw something funny which was the ‘System Offline’ notice on their desks. The grandeur service provider in Malaysia was having problem with their connection, for all over places, as the dude there said. We had to wait. While waiting, I went to Borders to look around at those mango (which eventually I bought some later). Initially, that guy said something like we might come back there around an hour later or so. But after wasting some 20 minutes at Borders, we went back to the that Maxis outlet. Still, System Offline da yo. But not long after that, that guy at the counter called me (if I am not mistaken, his name was Ahmad Hashir or something like that). He said, he can process my iPhone 3GS now. Well, it did took sometime and finally I have iPhone 3GS. At the same time, I guess that their system didn’t ‘offline’ but simply they have slow connection or some similar technical issues because I saw some of the guys could operate the stuffs albeit slow.

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World’s Best Companies 2009

Wii-tan

Wii-tan

Recently BusinessWeek has released the list of World’s Best Companies Top 40 which was compiled by A.T. Kearney. So, what is the criteria for a company to be in the list? In excerpt of what they say, it’s basically companies that have a commitment to innovation, diversified portfolios, aggressive expansion, strong leadership, and a clear vision for the future. “In an environment of continuous disruptive change, companies that have rigorous strategic planning initiatives that allow them to see over the horizon…are far more likely to win than those that make it up as they go along,” says Paul Laudicina, chairman of A.T. Kearney. To create the list, A.T. Kearney examined the 2,500 largest publicly listed companies in the world. Kearney’s team singled out those with a minimum of $10 billion in sales in 2008, at least 25% of which came from outside the company’s home region. It then ranked the companies on their sales growth and value creation—the rise of market capitalization after subtracting any increase in capital—over the past five years.

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Apple iPod for War

Fire in the hole!

Fire in the hole!

Apple’s New Weapon

To help soldiers make sense of data from drones, satellites and ground sensors, the U.S. military now issues the iPod Touch.

Tying the hands of a person who is speaking, the Arab proverb goes, is akin to “tying his tongue.” Western soldiers in Iraq know how important gestures can be when communicating with locals. To close, open and close a fist means “light,” but just opening a fist means “bomb.” One soldier recently home from Iraq once tried to order an Iraqi man to lie down. To get his point across, the soldier had to demonstrate by stretching out in the dirt. Translation software could help, but what’s the best way to make it available in the field?

The U.S. military in the past would give a soldier an electronic handheld device, made at great expense specially for the battlefield, with the latest software. But translation is only one of many software applications soldiers now need. The future of “networked warfare” requires each soldier to be linked electronically to other troops as well as to weapons systems and intelligence sources. Making sense of the reams of data from satellites, drones and ground sensors cries out for a handheld device that is both versatile and easy to use. With their intuitive interfaces, Apple devices—the iPod Touch and, to a lesser extent, the iPhone—are becoming the handhelds of choice.

Using a commercial product for such a crucial military role is a break from the past. Compared with devices built to military specifications, iPods are cheap. Apple, after all, has already done the research and manufacturing without taxpayer money. The iPod Touch retails for under $230, whereas a device made specifically for the military can cost far more. (The iPhone offers more functionality than the iPod Touch, but at $600 or $700 each, is much more expensive.) Typically sheathed in protective casing, iPods have proved rugged enough for military life. And according to an Army official in Baghdad, the devices have yet to be successfully hacked. (The Pentagon won’t say how many Apple devices are deployed, and Apple Computer declined to be interviewed for this article.)

The iPod also fulfills the U.S. military’s need to equip soldiers with a single device that can perform many different tasks. Apple’s online App Store offers more than 25,000 (and counting) applications for the iPhone and iPod Touch, which shares the iPhone’s touchscreen. As the elegantly simple iPods—often controlled with a single thumb—acquire more functionality, soldiers can shed other gadgets. An iPod “may be all that they need,” says Lt. Col. Jim Ross, director of the Army’s intelligence, electronic warfare and sensors operations in Fort Monmouth, New Jersey.

The iPod isn’t the only multifunction handheld on the market, but among soldiers it’s the most popular. Since most recruits have used one—and many already own one—it’s that much easier to train them to prepare and upload new content. Users can add phrases to language software, annotate maps and link text or voice recordings to photos (“Have you seen this man?”). Apple devices make it easy to shoot, store and play video. Consider the impact of showing villagers a video message of a relaxed and respected local leader encouraging them to help root out insurgents.

Since sharing data is particularly important in counterinsurgency operations, the Pentagon is funding technology that makes it easier for the soldier on the ground to acquire information and quickly add it to databases. Next Wave Systems in Indiana, is expected to release iPhone software that would enable a soldier to snap a picture of a street sign and, in a few moments, receive intelligence uploaded by other soldiers (the information would be linked by the words on the street sign). This could include information about local water quality or the name and photograph of a local insurgent sympathizer. The U.S. Marine Corps is funding an application for Apple devices that would allow soldiers to upload photographs of detained suspects, along with written reports, into a biometric database. The software could match faces, making it easier to track suspects after they’re released.

Apple gadgets are proving to be surprisingly versatile. Software developers and the U.S. Department of Defense are developing military software for iPods that enables soldiers to display aerial video from drones and have teleconferences with intelligence agents halfway across the globe. Snipers in Iraq and Afghanistan now use a “ballistics calculator” called BulletFlight, made by the Florida firm Knight’s Armament for the iPod Touch and iPhone. Army researchers are developing applications to turn an iPod into a remote control for a bomb-disposal robot (tilting the iPod steers the robot). In Sudan, American military observers are using iPods to learn the appropriate etiquette for interacting with tribal leaders.

Translation is another important area. A new program, Vcommunicator, is now being issued to soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan. It produces spoken and written translations of Arabic, Kurdish and two Afghan languages. It also shows animated graphics of accompanying gestures and body language, and displays pictures of garments, weapons and other objects. Procurement officials are making a “tremendous push” to develop and field militarily useful Apple devices, says Ernie Bright, operations manager of Vcom3D, the Florida firm that developed the software. The iPod has already transformed the way we listen to music. Now it’s taking on war.

By Benjamin Sutherland @ Newsweek

Good source: http://www.newsweek.com/id/194623

Actually after reading some news over the net regarding soldiers with iPods in the field and with a good logical brain, you could certainly predicted something like this happened to Apple’s iPod. Adding phone’s capabilities over iPod (which turned to iPhone) already became a mania over these years. I bet you can have a picture of those futuristic military stuffs just like in Hollywood movies. *cue those songs*

*goes to create more apps for iPod/iPhone*

Maxis Apple iPhone Launch

Apple iPhone was finally made available in Malaysia officially by Maxis. Truly, there are many people who are pretty happy when they heard about this official launch. Of course, there are also some people who are grieving about some stuffs that they feel unsatisfactory. Especially what Maxis have offered to them. Being an iPhone application developer, I was there under Maxis Developer Programme. In fact, all of us in the office went there as MDP provided us a booth for us to promote our products and applications. More importantly, we eventually met with other developers invited by Maxis where we could acquire more information about what and how are they actually developing. It’s nothing much but at least we could learn something from there.

Crowds at the Apple iPhone launch day

Crowds at the Apple iPhone launch day

We were invited to Menara Maxis (Maxis Tower) at KLCC several days before the launching event. The General Managers of the event asked us to do some video shooting regarding our products. I am unsure who is who as the managers there kinda have multiple tasks and everything. At least I know their names like Colin and Kugan. The video shooting was done simple and fast. Nothing fancy about. However that was my first time inside the office area at Menara Maxis. Something to brag about despite others might have been there for several times already…

Eheh

Eheh

Visitor tag

Visitor tag

The corridor at Level 8

The corridor at Level 8

Some PC booths there were not available. This PC has it's anti-virus running which made it unusable during scanning while some others having BSOD

Some PC booths there were not available. This PC has it's anti-virus running which made it unusable during the scanning while there's a PC having BSOD

Randomly taken from inside the building

Randomly taken from inside the building

I can feel the rushing and somewhat mismanagement here and there among the event organizers. Tentatively, the launching on Friday will be on 6 PM until 1 AM and there will be two areas needed to be covered. The official launching at KL Convention Center was mainly for those who pre-ordered the iPhone from Maxis through online and other submissions where Datuk Joseph Salang will be. While in Cyberjaya, Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi will be there for somewhat live broadcast and video conference between Cyberjaya and KL Convention Center. Some of us will be in Cyberjaya and the rest in KL Convention Center including me. As the event officially launched, people started getting in and then the VIPs are having those conference thing as the place geting crowded. After some few hours inside the hall, it was not a really pleasant thing. From my own view, Maxis did a lot of damage over there. It’s not because the event totally failed but a lot of things missing such as unstable crowd control. Lemme re-check:

  1. We, developers, were under Maxis Developer Programme. I can understand that we’re all required to wear black T-shirts and pants just to mimic how Steve Jobs has always wearing. But what makes me ponder was why do we get the same lanyards as those normal event crews? The manager who was in-charge of providing us the T-shirts and lanyards saying that there weren’t enough stuffs while some other people I saw were getting the special VIP tag.
  2. Like what I said in the first point just now, visitors there have always thought that we developers at the developers booth as same as those normal event crews in which their purpose was to guide the visitors on how to do this and that on an iPhone. I’ve been approached by several people asking me about iPhone features and stuffs rather than what we were actually displaying.
  3. Some visitors were informed by some unknown crews that the developers’ booths are for getting applications downloaded into their iPhones for free. That was a lie. I can tell that some crews were not getting enough understanding what we were doing there. There’s this Middle Eastern boy (maybe Spanish? I don’t know) asked me whether he can download stuffs for his iPhone. Again, I have to explain to this boy about what are we doing here which is about our products. Just like other people I’ve had to explain.
  4. The booth was unsatisfactory. I can understand if Maxis doesn’t want us to put our own banners as they wanted to make it look exclusive for Maxis and iPhone. I don’t mind with that. But the booth was simply… not good enough, I think. A chair for us developers with two other chairs for visitors. Basically, each developer group has one chair on inner side of the each booth. The desk we were getting was so-so. But the most important thing was a big banner or something that shows our booths as developers section or something like that. Since the booths were quite near the entrance, people always thought that we were somewhat information kiosk.
  5. When the crowds getting in, it would take sometime for those pre-orders to get their devices. There’s waiting list and all. Eventually there were many people sitting around the middle of the hall where there were some chairs there. But there were not enough. Instead, some of the people came to our booth and used the chairs. We were hoping people came to our booth asking about our development. Not some sort of by-passers using the chairs for them. Again, because there’s no obvious sign of what we were, they people don’t really know or care.
  6. There’s food booth outside the hall. Sadly it was only for the visitors. Weren’t we the developers there? Because of the lanyards we were using, we didn’t have the privilege of getting the food. Though sometimes they were slacking but that’s blatantly negative rules. I believed it was due to our event crew lanyards. Being over there from around 4 PM to 11 PM, I was quite hungry as I was only have my food during the lunch. No free food for such event is bad, you know?
  7. Since there’s a food booth, people will be taking some plates for the foods. When they finished eating, eventually some people put the empty plates at our booth. Superb. Now our booth became an empty plate collecting section. Sigh.

Perhaps there were other things I missed out but above are some points I listed from what I experienced in just one day. I didn’t attend the Saturday and Sunday parts because I have assignments needed to be done and submitted on Sunday for my Masters study. I saw Misbun Sidek and Lee Chong Wei on that night passing by our booth though. Perhaps they were getting the iPhone as well and they seemed rushing.

*facepalm*

*facepalm*