bookmark's archives

HedamiSoft, Launcher, Music Player (Remix), Music Player (Remix) 2.0, Music Remix, Quick Actions, apps, autolist, bookmark, facebook, homebrew, just type, music, playlist, twitter, webOS 2.0

Music Player (Remix) 2.0 getting Quick Actions, Just Type search, Autolists, and more [video]

December 8th 2010 | Posted by Derek Kessler

Music Player (Remix) 2.0Music Player (Remix) 2.0

If there’s one homebrew app that’s been incredibly popular from the start, it’s been Music Player (Remix). What started as an enhancement of the built-in webOS Music app, Remix has evolved to version 2.0 with a completely new UI, awesome utilization of dashboard controls, and more.

See everything that’s new, including a video, after the break!

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BrowserMarks, Delicious, Gmarks, Google Bookmarks, How To, Xmarks, apps, bookmark, fliq bookmarks, mark/space

How-to: accessing your desktop bookmarks while on the go

August 20th 2010 | Posted by Derek Kessler

Fliq BookmarksMost of us still do most of our web browsing from our desktop computers and have a large collection of bookmarks accumulated over the years, but getting those bookmarks to your phone wasn’t always the easiest of tasks. Thankfully, a number of parties have gone out of their way to make it as easy as the metaphorical pie (really, pie isn’t that easy). There are several services out there to make it happen, and short of a plug-in to sync sorted bookmarks into the webOS browser, we’ve got app choices. After the break, check out some of the options available for webOS users.

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Contacts, How To, Launcher, Palm, Palm OS, Palm Pre, Quick Tip, bookmark, iPhone, pre, universal search, web, webOS

How to: Rearrange and Delete Apps in your Launcher, Plus Shortcuts

June 12th 2009 | Posted by Derek Kessler

Rearranging apps in the LauncherThe Palm Pre’s launcher is good, and it’s also okay. The best description is a melding of the iPhone and Palm launchers, giving you a scrolling application list like Palm, but with no categories or auto-arranging – just like the iPhone. Granted, with Universal Search you probably won’t be visiting the launcher often, but for those of us engrained in the ways of Palm OS and the iPhone, it’s going to be a hard habit to break. So that leaves us with how to manage your launcher.

First up we’re going to cover rearranging the icons in your launcher. If like me you’re obsessive about the organization of your digital information, or like others simply want this app and that app at the top of the list, you’ll want to switch up the order of your launcher icons. To move an app, all you have to do is tap and hold on it until glowing rings appear around it, and then drag it to where you want and release. Thankfully due to the scrolling nature of the launcher it won’t be nearly as frustrating as the iPhone (where apps seem to randomly switch pages when you try and move something). If you want to move the app to a different one of the three pages (Three? Come on Palm!), all you’ve got do is move it to the edge of the screen and wait a second for the page to slide over. You can quickly gauge which page you’re on by the little white bars at the bottom of the launcher – they indicate how many pages are to your right and to the left.

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Add To LauncherOne of my favorite applications from the Palm OS days was SharkLinks; it let me add websites to my launcher as if they were applications. You can do the same in your browser, just open the menu, click on Page, and then select Add To Launcher. Just like in Bookmarks you can rename the site, change the URL, and reposition/resize the icon snapshot. Once you click the Add To Launcher button it will throw a link onto your launcher at the bottom of the first page (and then you can rearrange it to wherever you like).

You can do the same in Contacts. Just open the contact you want to add to the launcher, open the menu, and then click Add To Launcher. They’ll appear just like an application, and clicking on the icon will open that contact. Using Universal search any links or contacts you’ve added to the launcher will appear as applications (at the top of the list) and as the original contact (or not at all, in the case of web bookmarks). To remove a contact shortcut from your launcher, just open the contact and in the menu select Remove From Launcher (which will have replaced Add To Launcher).

Deleting an application through the launcherBut what about removing a web page? Since they aren’t technically applications, nor are they bookmarks, you can’t delete a web page link through the List Apps option in the Launcher menu, nor can you get rid of it through the Bookmarks menu in Web. To delete a launcher web link, or any third party application for that matter, all you have to do is hold down the Orange/Option key and tap on the icon. This will bring up a dialog with the app name and version, plus the option to Delete or just hit Done and get out of there. Tapping Delete will give you a Delete or Cancel confirmation and then you’re done. Easy as pie, and if there’s anything that we at PreCentral like, it’s pie. And webOS.

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App Catalog, Contacts, Entourage, Mac, Palm, Palm Pre, Safari, The Missing Sync, Wi-Fi, address book, apps, bookmark, calendar, iCal, iTunes, local synchronization, mark/space, news, pre, proximity sync

The Missing Sync for Palm Pre arrives

June 11th 2009 | Posted by Derek Kessler

The Missing Sync for Palm Pre

Less than a week after the Palm Pre landed in thousands of eager palms nationwide, the first local desktop synchronization solutions are coming. Perennial saver-of-Mac-Users Mark/Space has released the first beta of The Missing Sync for Palm Pre (with a PC version on the way). The Missing Sync creates a new Synergy profile for Calendar and Contacts and will sync with iCal and Address Book, or Microsoft Entourage if you so desire. The Missing Sync will also make it easy to sync music (via iTunes), photos, documents, movies, and more. It also comes with a Safari component that will send your bookmarks to a new bookmarks app on the Pre (which will then launch the links in Web).

The Missing Sync for Palm Pre also comes with proximity sync of your Synergy information over your Wi-Fi network, meaning you never have to think about syncing with your computer – it just does it. For a limited time, The Missing Sync will be available as a free beta application and can be found in the App Catalog on your Palm Pre, and the desktop component is up on Mark/Space.com. When The Missing Sync for Palm Pre comes out of beta, it will be available for $39.95.

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Chapura, Contacts, Echo, apps, bookmark, calendar, local sync, news

Chapura to bring Outlook and Palm Desktop sync to Pre

June 7th 2009 | Posted by Derek Kessler

PocketMirror for webOS - Coming Soon

You’ve got a brand new Palm Pre, and you’ve got Outlook on your computer with all your contacts and calendars, and you’re looking at the two and trying to figure out how to get them to talk. While Palm does have the Data Transfer Assistant to pull your stuff out of Outlook, throw it into the cloud, and then push it down to the Pre, it’s no substitute for actual synchronization. Chapura, makers of the PocketMirror Palm OS-Outlook sync program have declared their intent to bring PocketMirror to webOS. The newest version of PocketMirror will not only sync your Outlook contacts to your Pre, but will do it over your local Wi-Fi network, eliminating any concerns you may have about syncing your data into the unsecured cloud. PocketMirror for webOS, which Chapura’s website claims is ‘coming soon,’ will create a new Synergy account for Contacts and Calendar, enabling you to sync to-and-from Outlook with ease. Chapura will also be releasing Echo, a program that will do the exact same thing as PocketMirror, but with Palm Desktop! With the recently-announced The Missing Sync from mark/space also on the way, it’s looking like the cloud-averse are going to have plenty of options for the coveted local sync.

Thanks to Brian for the tip!

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