News, Reviews and more from Australia's Macintosh Authority
ADVERTISEMENT
The latest changes to Twitter are simple and unnoticeable at first, but they can make a world of difference for some users.
Jumping on the bandwagon with Photobucket, Posterous and TwitPic, Flickr now supports the social messaging site. The Flickr2Twitter function lets users tweet their photos directly from Flickr once they’ve authorised through Twitter.
With a couple button clicks, the service is ready to go, and Flickr even provides an e-mail address for uploading photos on the go. When tweeting photos through Flickr, you first have to upload the photo in the usual way. Then, you can tweet it by selecting the Twitter option under “Blog This.” It’s not the most intuitive system—a handy button that wasn’t hidden behind another function would’ve been nice—but at least it's there.

Twitter
aficionados may be more excited with tweaks to the site’s user
interface. These aren’t drastic changes, but they make it easier to
cull spammers and drop friends who used the site for a day and then
wandered off.
When viewing your list of followers or followees, their most recent tweets are put on display, speeding the process of determining who is a real person or and who's just a marketing bot. A new drop down menu controls how these users are handled, and you can message them, block them or follow their updates. A list view is also available for users who prefer the old way.
Of course, a spammer not followed is pretty innocuous, so these interface changes are cosmetic, built for people who obsess over how many of their followers are real or fake. And while Flickr functionality is great for Flickr users, it’ll go unnoticed by everyone else. Neither tool fundamentally changes what Twitter is, and that’s a good thing, business model be damned.
Like Facebook before it, MySpace is having to take corrective steps to curb spam from applications built by external developers using its new application development platform. In a posting to the official MySpace Developers blog on Tuesday, MySpace President Tom Anderson announced changes to the application guidelines intended to prevent developers from building self-promotional features into their applications that result in intrusive and deceitful behaviour, such as generating unsolicited messages to other users or tricking application users into approving such actions.
Juan Carlos Perez | May 22, 2008
Apple has released QuickTime 7.5.5 and Front Row 2.1.6. Both updates are available for download from the Software Update system preference.
Peter Cohen | Sep 10, 2008
Apple has re-released iTunes 8 for Windows to roll back a buggy driver that had been bricking Windows Vista PCs with dreaded 'blue screen of death' crashes since Tuesday.
Gregg Keizer | Sep 14, 2008
Mozilla Corp. will respond to rivals Google Inc. and Microsoft with a private-browsing mode in Firefox, according to notes posted on its Web site, and is on track to deliver one in 3.1, the version that will likely go beta next month.
Gregg Keizer | Sep 16, 2008
App Store developers will now be able to reach customers in 13 new countries, according to an announcement on the iPhone Developer Program news page.