Facebook iPad App Preview Leaks Out [PICS]
July 25, 2011 by admin
Filed under Lingerie Events
Update: It looks like Facebook has blocked access to the app at this time. Still, you can check out our screenshots to see how the app looks.
Facebook users were able to get a sneak peek of the social networking site’s long-rumored iPad app on Monday by using a jailbroken device and tweaking a file embedded in Facebook for iPhone.
The hack appears to have been first uncovered by Marvin Bernal on Twitter, and TechCrunch has since confirmed “with a source who had previously seen the Facebook iPad app” that this is indeed the iPad app that the company planned to launch with.
Facebook for iPad
Mashable used a jailbroken iPad 1 and made the necessary changes so we could try out the app ourselves.
As you can see from our gallery, it’s quite good. It takes many of the features we have come to see in third-party Facebook apps, but uses its full access to the Facebook API to make the user experience better and more fluid. Facebook Chat is supported, though video chat isn’t (yet) and browsing through the application is much like using Facebook’s web interface, but with a more refined, iPad twist.
Take a look at our screenshots and a description of some of the other features below:
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Law Firm Taps Cisco Quad to Unify Global Workforce
July 25, 2011 by admin
Filed under Lingerie Events
Minter Ellison, an Australian law firm specializing in mergers and acquisitions and telecommunications law, has been grappling
with a question facing many enterprises.
How to get its worldwide staff to communicate and share knowledge more efficiently, and thereby better serve clients?
With 2,500 total staff, 290 partners and 1,000 lawyers working in Australia (six offices), Hong Kong, the People’s Republic
of China, New Zealand and the United Kingdom, Minter Ellison has a far-flung workforce.
The firm instills a strategy it calls “One Firm”, a commitment that clients will get the best lawyers at hand with the appropriate
expertise wherever in the world they may be. To that end, Minter Ellison has invested heavily in Cisco technologies — including
the new social networking site Quad — so that its staff can form groups and quickly tap into each other’s expertise across
industries and time zones via Web teleconferences and social networking.
Cisco Quad, which merges Facebook-like profile pages and real-time communication features with business apps and document
and content management systems, will be an adjustment for Minter Ellison’s workforce, says CIO Peter Westerveld.
How CIOs Can Devise a Social Business Strategy
“Social networking in a business setting is fairly new for most employees,” he says.
But it’s a transition that will be aided by the fact that most people use Facebook, Twitter and Skype in their personal lives.
“People are familiar with these technologies and how they work. So the take-up is mostly seamless. There’s not a need for
much training or explanation of the concepts.”
Slideshow: Five 3D Virtual Environments for the Enterprise
While Minter Ellison has been a Cisco VoIP (voice over IP) customer for many years, the firm has recently turned up the dial
on its investment in Cisco’s unified communications products to facilitate worldwide employee collaboration.
The UC technologies in Minter Ellison’s stable include:
Cisco Telepresence for high-definition video and audio for virtual meetings.
Cisco WebEx meetings to connect employees and clients with live, interactive audio, data and video conferencing.
Cisco Unified Computing System data center platform for networking and storage access, where the firm has virtualized 85 percent
of its business, legal and CRM applications and has also used it to roll out UC services such as Cisco WebEx live meetings.
Cisco Quad, Cisco’s new “Facebook for the Enterprise”, which Minter Ellison has pilot tested and is now deploying for all
employees.
The last piece of the puzzle, Quad, is a major facet of Minter Ellison’s “One Firm” initiative to keep lawyers collaborating
on the Web, says Westerveld. He adds that Cisco Quad’s business-grade security features that hide and protect sensitive information
and control who can view certain docs as well as the ability to integrate other technologies are what sold him on the product
over offerings from Microsoft (SharePoint) and IBM (Lotus Sametime).
“Quad complements social networking very well with Cisco telepresence and WebEx tools as well as Microsoft Office docs and
Outlook e-mail,” he says.