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Box.net arrives on Android devices

Posted by Harshad

Box.net arrives on Android devices


Box.net arrives on Android devices

Posted: 23 Sep 2010 08:40 AM PDT

Box Android

Online storage and collaboration service Box.net is finally available on Android devices.

The free app, which hit the Android market today, does just about everything Box does on the iPhone and iPad, with a few added tricks. It can, for instance, now let you search for your files by name, and if a user is a business customer, it will even search the content found within those files.

Box's CEO and co-founder Aaron Levie told CNET earlier this week the same search feature would be coming to the iOS flavor of Box's apps, but he said Android users were more likely to use and expect that there would be a search feature given that they were using a Google phone.

The app also lets users upload any file that's on their phone both from the Box app, and from places like Android's camera or photo gallery. Levie was quick to point out that Box on Android was not as limited as it was on the iPhone though. "On iOS we can only let you upload photos, but you can do anything on the Android," he said.

Box on Android

Box.net for Android does pretty much everything its iOS counterparts can do, but is a bit speedier, and can upload any file type.

(Credit: Box.net)

One last trick up the sleeve of the Android version is that its speed doesn't get bogged down the larger your library of files gets. That could be a problem on the iPhone and make cruising through large folders of photos a laborious process. According to Levie, that issue will be addressed on iOS devices as well but that for now Android users would be getting better performance.

The new app works on any Android device running Android 2.0 or higher. Levie said that the next platform on the docket would be BlackBerry, which is due in the next few months.

Originally posted at Web Crawler

Google: Chrome Frame ready for prime time

Posted: 23 Sep 2010 05:43 AM PDT

(Credit: Google)

Google's Chrome Frame, a project to retrofit older versions of Internet Explorer with modern browser features, has reached "stable" status, which the company believes means it's ready for widespread use. (Chrome Frame is available for download from Google and CNET Download.com.)

"After months of polishing, Google Chrome Frame now starts three times faster on Windows Vista and Windows 7 and the most common conflicts with other plug-ins have been fixed," said programmers Tomas Gunnarsson and Robert Shield in a blog post Wednesday. Chrome Frame emerged publicly one year ago as a developer preview and graduated to beta status in June, and the programmers promised further improvements in the future as Chrome Frame gets on the six-week release cycle of the standalone Chrome browser.

Loathing for IE6 is universal among Web developers who must reckon with its lack of standards support, sluggish JavaScript support, and less secure design; Microsoft is among those who fervently want to see it replaced. Chrome frame is a curious approach to the problem, though: given abundanct free browser alternatives--including two other major IE releases that arrived since IE6's 2001 debut--it's not clear why somebody would choose an IE brain transplant over just installing a new browser.

Another hurdle for Chrome Frame is that Web site operators must support it by adding a line of code that Chrome Frame looks for when the page is loaded.

IE6 shipped with Windows XP, an operating system that's still widely used, especially in corporate environments where internal applications sometimes don't work with other browsers. Even those who'd like to dump IE6 often can't because their systems are locked down by corporate IT departments.

Microsoft IE9 logo

Chrome Frame has tweaked Microsoft's nose, but it's likely Microsoft's IE9 will be more influential in the long run when it comes to modernizing browsers.

Google is trying to overcome that barrier, though. "We've set aggressive goals for future releases," Gunnarsson and Shield wrote. "We're working on making start-up speed even faster and removing the current requirement for administrator rights to install the plug-in," which would help sidestep IT prohibitions. And for IT departments that want to specifically add Chrome Frame into the mix, Google offers a Chrome Frame installer file for administrators.

Microsoft doesn't care for Chrome Frame, which it says exposes users to new network attack possibilities, but it does want to be rid of IE6.

To that end, Microsoft released its IE9 beta last week with a large collection of competitive new browser features. Microsoft's browsers have languished in recent years, but it's abundantly clear now that browser development is a top priority, and however much trouble Microsoft has had becoming an Internet company, it knows its way around Windows software.

IE9 has some powerful advantages. Microsoft is integrating it tightly with Windows plumbing and can take advantage of Windows PC sales as a means of distribution. And IE, though its share has slipped dramatically in recent years, remains the most widely used browser.

It seems more likely that IE9 will prove more influential in the big picture than Chrome Frame in modernizing Web browsing. But there's no doubt Google has injected new energy into Web development.

One new piece of evidence: Chris Wilson, a Microsoft programmer who began working on IE in 1995, is becoming a Google developer advocate. Wilson not only rose to be IE's platform architect, but also served as the World Wide Web Consortium's co-chairman for the group standardizing HTML, albeit somewhat reluctantly.

"I'm very excited to work for a company that invests so much in making the Web platform better for developers and consumers," Wilson said in a blog post Tuesday.

Originally posted at Deep Tech

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