Same here. And most important to me, it implements the Google Reader API, so my filtering scripts continue to work.
During the last XCode beta, I was playing around with the iPhone simulator and using a proxy I saw the server would respond to geocoding requests with an 'application/x-protobuf' header. That header has since been…
I find it ironic that Apple is using RPC-encoded Google protocol buffers for communication in their Maps product.
straighttalk and some othe mvnos (cell service resellers) are also in the $40 ballpark for unlimited service. The only practical restriction is you can't use it for tethering.
$10,000 per API call...
They do employ the author of Vim.
Pass. Doesn't handle Transmission.
Presumably they'll still be tracking which ads were downloaded by your device. So instead of directly sharing your data with advertisers, now the advertisers can simply do a bit of data mining to infer your data from…
I took a look at the network traffic between the iPhone simulator and their servers and it appears they're using a proprietary variant of protocol buffers to encode the data. As soon as somebody figures out how they…
It still requires Flash: "In order to use Pandora internet radio, please upgrade to a more current browser or install a newer version of Flash (v.10 or later)." That was with FF 7.0 w/o Flash.
Same here. And most important to me, it implements the Google Reader API, so my filtering scripts continue to work.
During the last XCode beta, I was playing around with the iPhone simulator and using a proxy I saw the server would respond to geocoding requests with an 'application/x-protobuf' header. That header has since been…
I find it ironic that Apple is using RPC-encoded Google protocol buffers for communication in their Maps product.
straighttalk and some othe mvnos (cell service resellers) are also in the $40 ballpark for unlimited service. The only practical restriction is you can't use it for tethering.
$10,000 per API call...
They do employ the author of Vim.
Pass. Doesn't handle Transmission.
Presumably they'll still be tracking which ads were downloaded by your device. So instead of directly sharing your data with advertisers, now the advertisers can simply do a bit of data mining to infer your data from…
I took a look at the network traffic between the iPhone simulator and their servers and it appears they're using a proprietary variant of protocol buffers to encode the data. As soon as somebody figures out how they…
It still requires Flash: "In order to use Pandora internet radio, please upgrade to a more current browser or install a newer version of Flash (v.10 or later)." That was with FF 7.0 w/o Flash.