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<title>Haaze.com / brerurseNap / All</title>
<link>http://www.haaze.com</link>
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<pubDate>Tue, 01 Mar 2011 08:10:23 +0000</pubDate>
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<title><![CDATA[Evernote overhauls its iPhone app]]></title>
<link>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=evernote-overhauls-its-iphone-app</link>
<comments>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=evernote-overhauls-its-iphone-app</comments>
<pubDate>Tue, 01 Mar 2011 08:10:23 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>brerurseNap</dc:creator>
<category>Mobile &amp; Electronics</category>
<guid>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=evernote-overhauls-its-iphone-app</guid>
<description><![CDATA[Press the plus sign to enter split-screen mode.(Credit:Evernote)Starting today, Evernote's popular note-taking app foriPhone andiPod Touch will have more than a few new features and enhancements. The design is cleaner in Evernote 4 as a whole, and changes include everything from a revamped home screen and note-taking screen to new capabilities--like removing attachments you no longer want or need and adding multiple images at a time to a note. Notes now appear in snippet form to provide greater context for text-based or mixed-media notes. More photo real estate is also visible for picture notes as the thumbnail view gives way to a full-width slice (pictured at right). New notes are now controlled by the plus sign navigation button, which triggers a split-screen view. You'll enter your text in the top and attach or record multimedia (up to 90 minutes of audio) and tags in the bottom. If you're browsing for something specific, added filters allow you to respectively view all the photos, attachments, or maps. Evernote has even more plans for future iterations of its app, including shared notebooks and formatting notes within the app.<br/><br/>0 Vote(s) ]]></description>
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<title><![CDATA[How not to use Facebook as a burglary tool]]></title>
<link>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=how-not-to-use-facebook-as-a-burglary-tool</link>
<comments>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=how-not-to-use-facebook-as-a-burglary-tool</comments>
<pubDate>Wed, 23 Feb 2011 08:11:06 +0000</pubDate>
<dc:creator>brerurseNap</dc:creator>
<category>Marketing and advertising</category>
<guid>http://www.haaze.com/story.php?title=how-not-to-use-facebook-as-a-burglary-tool</guid>
<description><![CDATA[I've never been a burglar, but I imagine one of the talents you need is a modicum of discretion.It's probably not wise to, say, tell your mom and dad, a policeman, or someone selling you a sausage at a stall that you've just burgled a house.I sense it might not be wise to post a picture of yourself, stolen goods in hand, on the Facebook page of your victim's son.According to NBC Washington, Rodney Knight might not agree with me. Police said Knight broke in to the home of Washington Post writer Marc Fisher last December and helped himself to a couple of laptops, a very nice winter coat, and a few hundred in cash.Crime Scene--Do Not Cross(Credit:CC AlanCleaver2000/Flickr)Perhaps he was rather excited by his haul. Perhaps he was an avid reader of The Washington Post. Who knows why Knight decided to put on the rather well-fitting coat, take a picture of himself with a handful of cash, and then, according to Marc Fisher, post this picture on the Facebook page of Fisher's sonOddly enough, this seems to have made Knight's capture slightly more possible. Some might feel Knight acted wisely in pleading guilty to second degree burglary.Next week: someone posts on Facebook while in the middle of robbing a house, and asks friends what should be stolen.<br/><br/>0 Vote(s) ]]></description>
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