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Monday, 5 September 2011

Note Life HD for iPad By Chronos

Chronos is taking its note managing act to the iPad. The company released NoteLife HD for iPad, a tablet-sized version of the media-rich note manager that’s been available for iPhone users since late 2009.NoteLife notes can include plain text, rich text, images, PDFs, audio, video, Web archives, and bookmarks. Users can also add category tags, geotags, encryption, and comments to individual notes.

The iPad app also offers a note browsing history, built-in voice recorder, and camera support. There’s also a search feature, and users have the option to rearrange folders and designate favorites. The ultra-organized will be pleased to know that they can even create sub-folders and customize notes by font and color. You can use the app in both portrait and landscape mode, and view notes in list form or in the app’s Cover Flow view, which offers a more visual representation.

 

The iPad version of NoteLife can synchronize with its iPhone counterpart as well as with Chronos’s Soho Notes application for the Mac. Currently, syncing is only available over Wi-Fi.NoteLife HD is available in the App Store for $10; it runs on iOS 3.2 or later.

Run Your OS X Lion With One in Six Macs

One-in-six Macs now runs Apple's latest operating system, a Web metrics company said last week. According to California-based Net Applications, Mac OS X 10.7, aka Lion, accounts for 1 percent of all desktop operating systems that were used to connect to the Internet last month.The total usage share of Mac OS X was 6 percent, said Net Applications.Apple released Lion on July 20 to the Mac App Store, where the download-only upgrade was priced at $29.99. Two weeks ago, Apple also started selling Lion on a USB flash drive for $69, aiming that version at users who lack a broadband connection to the Internet.

Lion's online usage nearly matched that of Mac OS X 10.5, or Leopard, the edition Apple released in October 2007. At the end of August, Leopard's share was 1.2 percent.Mac OS X 10.6, aka Snow Leopard, remained the most widely-used version of Apple's desktop operating system, with an overall share of 3.5 percent, or 57 percent of all Macs.Snow Leopard's share fell by half a percentage point in August as users migrated to Lion.Mac OS X is still dwarfed by Microsoft's Windows, which powers almost 93 percent of all desktops and laptops, said Net Applications. (See also "Running Windows on a Mac: Lion vs Windows 7 Shootout.")

With August's data, Net Applications revamped the way it tracks operating use by separating smartphones and tablets from conventional personal computers, a change the company said was prompted by the rise in mobile browsing.Net Applications calculates operating system usage share with data obtained from more than 160 million unique visitors who browse 40,000 Web sites that the company monitors for clients. More operating system usage data can be found on the company's site.