Friday, July 31, 2009

How To Change Your Facebook Username

Last month, Facebook introduced vanity URLs for all its users where they could have a personalized URL for their profile pages. This was previously available only for celebrities that were on Facebook.

Thanks to vanity URLs, you can now easily share your profile URLs with friends and on other online networks. When choosing our username for the first time, Facebook recommended to choose that carefully, because you won’t be able to change it later.

facebook-username-change

Yesterday, Facebook again made it available for users to change their usernames once more, in case you’ve mistyped or chosen something you didn’t want.

How To Change Your Facebook Username

To change your username, click on Settings which is beside the Search box in the top right. Second option would be of Username. Click on change and type your new username.

This was supposed to be only available for one-time change, but Facebook is allowing it as many times we want now. May be they will change it later.

You can connect with me on Facebook from my profile URL:

http://www.facebook.com/rohit.chadha

Thanks Harisn

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

How to view YouTube in 3-D

Remember those awesome 3-D glasses we got as kids? The ones that entice us to watch those TV shows and read those awesome books until our eyes get sore from too much 3-D. But seriously, can you imagine a YouTube where we have options for watching our favorite videos in 3-D? How awesome can that get?

According to the ever-reliable Wikipedia, “Stereoscopy, stereoscopic imaging or 3-D (three-dimensional) imaging is any technique capable of recording three-dimensional visual information or creating the illusion of depth in an image. The illusion of depth in a photograph, movie, or other two-dimensional image is created by presenting a slightly different image to each eye.”

So if you have one of those nifty 3-D glasses, why don’t you head on over to this video, and try it out? You’ll see a drop-down that includes some options for red/cyan and amber/blue 3D glasses and some options that don’t require glasses.

So now we can actually get to see a 3-D YouTube. Okay, not now of course, but YouTube is testing the feature. To enable the 3D player, you need to add the following tag to one of your videos: yt3d:enable=true. Pete, a Google employee, has more information about this experimental feature:

I’m the developer working on the stereoscopic player as a 20% project. It’s currently very early, hence the silly bugs like swapping the eyes for the anaglyph modes. A fix for this is in the works.

The current tags are provisional and may change or expand. They are:

yt3d:enable=true Enables the view mode.
yt3d:aspect=3:4 Sets the aspect of the encoded video.
yt3d:swap=true Swaps the left and right sources. You may need to add this to videos when the player with fixed anaglyph modes ships.

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Saturday, July 25, 2009

10 Fantastic iPhone Apps That Use Facebook Connect

This list brings you 10 more fantastic apps that allow you to connect with Facebook from your iPhone to do things like share information, sync data, challenge friends to games, and access media.

iNapkin


Scramble


Top Friends



iFightU


Phonebook


Read More

Microsoft Store Design Plans Leaked

A presentation showcasing design ideas for the upcoming Microsoft Store has been leaked to Gizmodo.

Taking the best elements from the Apple Store, Sony Style, Niketown and other retail shops, the Microsoft Store will focus on Windows 7, Windows Mobile, Xbox, PCTV, and Surface.

The Customer Journey is targeted towards Emily as she visits different areas of the store such as Personalization, Answer Bar, Software, Theatre Area, and Check Out.

Gizmodo highlights some main points of interest:
• There's going to be a Digital Media Wall—a massive screen—that wraps around the entire store, which you can see in some of the slides
• Lots of Surface demos
• Stage areas for Windows 7, Windows Media Center (PCTV), Windows Mobile and netbooks
• Their take on the Genius Bar is the Answer Bar
• They're already planning out huge demos and events around Project Natal and their secret mobile project Pink
• You can pay to have your birthday party at the Microsoft Store

The presentation posted is fifty four pages long and even contains competitive analysis. You can see all the slides by hitting the link below.

Read More via
iclarified


























Friday, July 24, 2009

Apple & Verizon: Working Together on a Tablet?


A rumor has begun to spread, stating that Verizon and Apple are in cahoots together to design a tablet computer. This tablet would be a large touchscreen (Boy Genius describes it as a 'giant iPod touch') with either an on screen keyboard, or a full physical keyboard. It's possible that this tablet would attempt to bridge the gap between tablets and E-Readers by fulfilling both functions.

Apple is supposedly working on this project with Verizon, who will subsidize the device and offer it on their network. That more than likely means this tablet will be 3G enabled. The mock-up we've seen looks gorgeous, and I very badly want to believe that this rumor is true. An Apple tablet wouldn't just be a great product, it would energize every other manufacturer in the business to both up their game, and lower their prices.

Unfortunately, this rumor has a very good chance of being nothing more than dead air. This rumor comes from The Street which is run by Jim Cramer and friends. Cramer is far from a reliable source, and he's already gotten in trouble for advising hedge funds to spread false rumors about Apple. While that alone isn't reason to dismiss this rumor, it should be enough to convince you to take it with several big grains of salt.

Source: i4u

Thursday, July 23, 2009

Google Latitude finally makes it over to iPhone, as a web app


Our Latitude web app provides all the core functionality you might expect: you can see the location of your friends on a map and modify your privacy settings so that you control how your location is shared and with whom. In fact, if my friends and colleagues back in London haven't yet noticed my absence, they'll see in Latitude that I'm currently vacationing on the beach in Australia. Hi guys, remember me!?

You'll also find basic Search and Directions functionality to help you get around the world. And just like our Google Maps for mobile client apps (and more recently on desktop Google Maps), you can press the "blue dot" to be taken to your approximate current location on the map with My Location, thanks to Safari now supporting the W3C Geolocation API.

Source: Google Blog

Can Dell Dethrone the iPhone?

When the subject of a rumored Dell cell phone came up at the company’s financial analyst meeting this week, Dell indicated there was one coming, but gave few details on it. So far, all we know for sure is that it will be based on LTE, or 4G network technologies, putting the timing for the device in 2011 for appreciable volume (though it is at least possible we could see it in late 2010). I figured it might be fun to chat about what Dell needed it to be, if it was going to beat the iPhone. Given that Dell’s Digital Jukebox got its butt kicked by the iPod, I’m thinking the company is looking for a rematch, and could do it right this time.

But what would “do it right” mean, and how do you beat the iPhone?


Palm PrePalm and Blackberry Show the Way

Both the Palm Pre and Blackberry line of phones have grown market share during times when the iPhone has been doing well, by focusing either on things the iPhone did poorly, or a large customer base that the iPhone doesn’t target very well.

The Palm Pre is very similar to the iPhone, improving on the iPhone’s user interface, adding a keyboard, and a removable battery to stand out favorably against the competition. RIM continued its focus on with Blackberry phones, and I know a lot of people who use a Blackberry for work, and an iPhone as their personal phone as a result.

This suggests that the ideal product might be one that businesses would embrace, while still being attractive for non-business use: a combination between the Palm Pre and Blackberry experience.


Owning the Customer

One other thing that the iPhone, Blackberry, and Palm Pre have in common is that all their vendors tend to own and assure the customer experience. They also demand generation (marketing) for their respective phones, and Palm is actually doing a rather impressive job promoting their phone at the moment. I think they would be doing vastly better if they sold through multiple carriers, like Blackberry does, as opposed to just through Sprint. Sprint, unfortunately, is still the least-liked vendor in the U.S., and that has to hurt the Pre’s potential until Palm moves to additional carriers next year.

Android based phoneOne of the reasons I think that Android and Microsoft phones don’t seem to be doing as well at the moment is that with those phones’ customer ownership isn’t clear. You have one company doing the hardware, another providing the network services, and then a third providing the software user experience. None of these players generally seem willing to market at Apple, Blackberry, or Palm levels, nor actually assure that the total experience is market leading.

Dell certainly can own the customer. They typically do a better job of this in the PC market than any other vendor, because most of their products, unlike competitors’, are sold directly from the company. But cell phone service providers tend to complicate things, and it isn’t clear if Dell can, or even wants to, step up and play this game like Apple, Palm, and RIM do.


Leveraging PCs

Palm traditionally does the best job working with PCs. For instance, more of its products can typically be tethered to a PC and work like a modem than competitors. Blackberry was slow to the 3G game due to battery life concerns, making tethering a lower priority for it, and AT&T has prevented Apple from offering tethering. Even though this is changing soon, it takes us right back to owning the customer, and points out that even Apple doesn’t own its customers exclusively.

But for Dell to have an advantage, it has to come at this market from its core strength, which is PC sales. If Dell’s device makes a compelling PC accessory and connects solidly back to the Dell line of laptop products, the synergy could give it an advantage over others. However, Apple did already take a big step in this direction with MobileMe.


NVIDIA Tegra 600 SeriesMy Dream Phone

While I doubt this is the way they will go, were it me, I’d do an Alienware phone. Base it on Nvidia’s Tegra platform, give it an organic Alien-style gloss and metal finish, and blow the windows out in performance. Regardless of the OS, (likely Android or Windows Mobile 7) I’d make sure it had a unique Alienware feel to it and wrap it with a set of accessories that were as wild as the phone was. They could do this, and that’s one phone I’d lust after. Maybe it would look a little like this, but with more of an alien edge.


Wrapping Up

The old Dell DJ got its butt whipped by the Apple iPod, largely because Dell was unwilling to do what it took to beat the competition. That included better industrial design, owning the user experience, and powerful marketing. Its second run at Apple is coming. If Dell learned from its first failure, we should see a very interesting product, but likely not much before 2011 when LTE, or 4G, becomes more prevalent. Until then, we will have to imagine what a Dell phone might look like, and whether it will repeat the failure of the DJ, or learn from Palm and Blackberry to pull an upset. We’ll see.


Source: Digital Trends

Listening to Mr iPhone


By any measure, he is among the most important figures in technology of the last decade, a major influence on the way we use and interact with computers and mobile phones, a British designer who ranks with the Conrans and the Dysons. But have you ever heard Jonathan Ive, the Apple designer behind the iMac, the iPod and the iPhone, talk about his work?

Jonathan IveI hadn't - so when a friend invited me to hear him speak at the Royal College of Art's Innovation Night I leaped at the chance.

Now one of the reasons you don't hear much from the Apple designer is that he is, by his own admission, a hesitant and unpolished speaker. He told the audience at the Royal College that he's learned that preparing presentations takes him away from perfecting a product, so he'd rather let others do the talking.

But the format last night was a fireside chat between Ive and the Rector of the Royal College Sir Christopher Frayling in front of an audience of students and what seemed like the whole of the London design community.

Amongst his own people, the designer seemed more comfortable than faced with intrusive probing from some impertinent hack - though I did manage to get one question in about what he'd have liked to change about the first version of the iPhone(no clear answer, I'm afraid, though he said designers were never satisfied with their work).

And what emerged were some fascinating insights into the culture of Apple and the craft of industrial design. Ive was insistent that the key to Apple's success was that it was not driven by money - a claim that may raise eyebrows amongst shareholders and customers - but by a complete focus on delivering just a few desirable and useful products.

"For a large mulit-billion dollar company we don't actually make many different products," he explained. "We're so focused, we're very clear about our goals."

He said that Steve Jobs had always made it very clear that this focus on products was the only reason for Apple to exist - and contrasted the culture with that of other companies who talk about having similar aims: "If you have to spend time institutionalising that, talking about it, you end up chasing your tail."

So how did the company decide what customers wanted - surely by using focus groups? "We don't do focus groups," he said firmly, explaining that they resulted in bland products designed not to offend anyone.

Christopher Frayling reminded us at that point of Henry Ford's line about what his customers would have demanded if asked - "a faster horse" - and it's surely true that the point of innovative companies is to come up with products that customers don't yet know they need.

But it was the physicality of design work that Jonathan Ive was keen to stress - from the Apple design workshop full of machines, throwing off a lot of noise and dust, to visits to Japanese aluminium craftsmen to learn how that material could be crafted into a laptop casing. Yes, of course he and his team use all the latest computer-aided design tools - but he also likes to knock out a physical prototype and feel the weight of it in his hand.

He told a story about how, as a boy, he'd taken apart an old-fashioned alarm clock, and inside the spare outer casing found a mass of workings, "an entire watch factory".

Extraordinary complexity wrapped in a simple, functional, touchable, beautiful case - that seems to be the Apple design ethic.

So an inspiring 45 minutes in the company of a design genius - a few fragments of which I filmed using one of Mr Ive's own products. But at the end, Apple's PR team came up to stress that this was a private event and would I please keep the pictures to myself.

Another example of the somewhat paranoid culture of a company which always wants to be in complete control of its message. But maybe that's another reason for its success...

Source: BBC

7 Logon Changer: Change Windows 7 Login Screen on the Fly

We all know Windows 7 allows users to easily change Login screen background:

Windows 7 Supports Login Screen Customization Without 3rd Party Software

You just need to follow a few simple steps. But there is a new tool available to do the whole task automatically.

"krishnanblr" @ WinMatrix forums has created a small tool which allows you to change login screen background on the fly. You just need to select the desired image and click on "Set" button to apply it.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v374/vishaal_here/7_Logon_Changer.png

Its a very small and easy to use tool which can be downloaded using following link:

Download 7 Logon Change

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

After 1.5 billion downloads, is it time for Apple to redesign the App Store?


Sometimes, the qualities that makes a product great are the same qualities that makes it such a huge headache. Take Apple’s App Store. Here’s an invention that has transformed the iPhone – already a font of cultural cache – into the hottest new gaming platform around.

By lowering the fee for fledgling developers, and opening their doors wide, Apple has ushered in a new generation of whip-smart titles – games created not by a sprawling corporation in California, but one dude working out of his mom’s basement.

Last week, Apple announced that it hit another landmark: 1.5 billion applications downloaded.

At the same time, the App Store’s relatively low bar-of-entry has yielded a couple media firestorms. In April, for instance, the “Baby Shaker” game hit the market. The idea for the game was pretty simple: quiet down a baby by shaking your iPhone or iPod. Shake long enough, and a couple of X’s materialized over the baby’s eyes.

After child protection groups protested, Apple yanked the game off the market. A month later, the same ruling was meted out to “Me So Holy,” an application which let users snap a photo of themselves, and affix it to the body of Jesus.

Zombie hunting

The latest game to raise the pulse of the blogosphere is “Zombie School,” a shooter produced by a company called Retarded Arts. Long story, short, “Zombie School” puts the gamer on a campus invested by zombies, and encourages him to blast his way out, with the help of a small arsenal of weapons.

The game, PC World’s Brandon Slattery wrote today, “[pushes] the boundaries of good taste in a post-Columbine society,” and “essentially glorifies school shootings, thinly veiled under the guise of a zombie game.”

Others have pointed out that Retarded Arts is apparently attempting to stir up an extra modicum of disgust by astro-turfing several prominent online forums. According to Robin Wauters at TechCrunch, several posts complaining that the game is “promoting school shooting” were placed by a representative of Retarded Arts.

The real issue

As of this post, Apple had not issued any comment on “Zombie School,” and the game remained available for under a dollar on the App Store. But even if the company does decide to yank the game – and it’s looking pretty likely, to judge by the trajectory of past controversies – Apple’s got a deeper problem on its hands.

Over at Computer World, Peter Wayner has penned a long – and highly readable – account of his own struggle to get an application rammed past the team at the App Store. “Apple’s App Store is the only way to share your applications with the world,” he writes, “and it is lorded over by an inscrutable team of guardians devoted to maintaining control over the platform.”

Elsewhere, he weighs the lessons of the dot-com bubble:

Back in 1995, Bill Gates took one look at the Internet and scrapped his dreams of dominating online life with MSN. Apple would do well to look over his memo because there are indications that the beautiful design and wonderful experience of the iPhone can’t withstand the tidal wave of ingenuity out there. Creativity will find expression, and bored developers waiting for approval will check out other platform.

In other words, Wayner sees the App Store’s apparatus as unequal to the demand – there are thousands of developers, eager to get their applications live. There’s also a shaky approval process. In the long run, that could yield disaster.

So what’s the solution?

As we’ve written here before, Apple could go open-source, and allow a crowd of developers to vet the submissions of the individual. Questionable content could be flagged; the worst of the chaff could be cut from the wheat. Apple would avoid looking like an iron-fisted censor – although the company could retain the right to veto the crowd – and everything would move along in a much more orderly fashion.

Barring that, Apple should consider shedding light on the approval process. As one commentator on a iPhone message board wrote last year, Apple might introduce a system “where developers can not only communicate with Apple via email, conference chat with iChat AV and use a bug reporting system, but also allow developers to communicate with each other.”

Sunlight, after all, is the best disinfectant.

Source: csmonitor.com

Rumor: Apple Netbook coming in October?




We get a lot of e-mails from folks asking us when to expect a Netbook from Apple. Let's make something absolutely clear: despite all the previous rumors, we have no idea if, or when, such a product will exist. But we will let report to you when a new (or recycled) rumor pops in the blogsphere.

The latest: the Mandarin-language publication Chinese Times is reporting that Apple will release a Netbook in October. We tend to put a question mark on our rumor headlines, but there doesn't seem to be any question mark in the reporting here--at least according to a translation of the article that appeared within MacRumors.com's forum.

Naturally, this all comes from a "reliable source." Here's the key quote in the article (again, we are going by the translation that appeared on MacRumors):

Taiwan's high-tech supply chain companies said Apple will debut its first Netbook in October; Apple will pose itself to tackle the Christmas shopping season. Three (Taiwanese) corporations--Foxconn, Wintek, Dynapack--have received direct orders from Apple. (Wintek will be producing touch screens and providing relevant technologies for Apple.) In addition, some supply chain companies have privately confirmed deals related to Netbooks."

The report also goes on to add that "Apple will not follow the current market trend (by producing Netbooks with screens about 10.2 or 10.1 inches in diagonal length). Instead, Apple will produce (touch) screens with about 9.7 inches in diagonal length." As to cost, word is that it will come in around $800, which is about what we'd expect an Apple Netbook to cost (if the company decides to make one).

There are also some interesting updates tacked on to the MacRumors post as additional stories have come out. One update says there are "unconfirmed rumors" that British reporters pried Apple Netbook info out of several Foxconn Electronics employees and that although Foxconn refused to publicly comment on the rumors, the reporters may have gotten some sort of private confirmation on the rumors' validity from the company itself.

Again, these are all rumors, and with Apple, you never know what kind of bizarre smoke screen it might put out there. But in the past, the company has had some issues with leaks coming out of its suppliers in Taiwan, so we're thinking there might be some truth to this one--especially since the same rumor hit back in March. Either way, we do expect Apple to release new iPods this fall (as it has the last few years). Whether one of them will be a giant iPod Touch remains to be seen.


Source: Cnet.com

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

APPLE Best Non-Holiday Quarter Revenue and Earnings in Apple History


Apple Reports Third Quarter Results

CUPERTINO, Calif., July 21 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — Apple® today announced financial results for its fiscal 2009 third quarter ended June 27, 2009. The Company posted revenue of $8.34 billion and a net quarterly profit of $1.23 billion, or $1.35 per diluted share. These results compare to revenue of $7.46 billion and net quarterly profit of $1.07 billion, or $1.19 per diluted share, in the year-ago quarter. Gross margin was 36.3 percent, up from 34.8 percent in the year-ago quarter. International sales accounted for 44 percent of the quarter's revenue.

In accordance with the subscription accounting treatment required by GAAP, the Company recognizes revenue and cost of goods sold for iPhone(TM) and Apple TV® over their estimated economic lives. Adjusting GAAP sales and product costs to eliminate the impact of subscription accounting, the corresponding non-GAAP measures* for the quarter are $9.74 billion of "Adjusted Sales" and $1.94 billion of "Adjusted Net Income."

Apple sold 2.6 million Macintosh® computers during the quarter, representing a four percent unit increase over the year-ago quarter. The Company sold 10.2 million iPods during the quarter, representing a seven percent unit decline from the year-ago quarter. Quarterly iPhones sold were 5.2 million, representing 626 percent unit growth over the year-ago quarter.

"We're making our most innovative products ever and our customers are responding," said Steve Jobs, Apple's CEO. "We're thrilled to have sold over 5.2 million iPhones during the quarter and users have downloaded more than 1.5 billion applications from our App Store in its first year."

"We're extremely pleased to report record non-holiday quarter revenue and earnings and quarterly cash flow from operations of $2.3 billion," said Peter Oppenheimer, Apple's CFO. "Looking ahead to the fourth fiscal quarter of 2009, we expect revenue in the range of about $8.7 billion to $8.9 billion and we expect diluted earnings per share in the range of about $1.18 to $1.23."

Apple will provide live streaming of its Q3 2009 financial results conference call utilizing QuickTime®, Apple's standards-based technology for live and on-demand audio and video streaming. The live webcast will begin at 2:00 p.m. PDT on July 21, 2009 at http://www.apple.com/quicktime/qtv/earningsq309/ and will also be available for replay for approximately two weeks thereafter.

apple.com

27 New Beautiful iPhone themes

Here I m posting 27 cool new and Beautiful iphone themes for your Apple iPhone. Hope you will like it

1)FLAT theme for iPhone

Flat Theme for iPhone contains 100 beautiful icons, wallpapers, lockscreen etc.


FLAT theme for iPhone
Download Flat theme for iPhone


2)Glacies v1.1 - iPhone Theme

Glacies is a Beautiful WinterBoard Theme for iPhone with104 beautiful icons, wallpapers, lockscreen etc.


Glacies v1.1 - iPhone Theme
Download Glacies v1.1 - iPhone Theme


3)iPhone NewIcon Theme

NewIcon theme for iPhone created by AUTphoenix .

iPhone NewIcon Theme
Download iPhone NewIcon Theme



4)BlueSpace Theme for iPhone

BlueSpace Theme needs the SummerBoard application installed on iPhone.


BlueSpace for iPhone
Download BlueSpace Theme for iPhone


5)Black and White iPhone Themes

Black and White iPhone Themes comes with a set of 37 icons, a beautiful dock, a beautiful wallpaper etc.


Black and White iPhone Themes

Download Black and White iPhone Themes for iPhone


6)Blue Matrix Theme for iPhone

A Matrix Style theme for your iPhone


Blue_Matrix_for_iPhone_by_shoowack_002
Download Blue Matrix Theme for iPhone


7)ReText Wood Theme for iPhone

A cool woody style iPhone theme


iPhone_Theme_ReText_1_0_4_Wood_by_febian_002
Download ReText Wood Theme for iPhone



8)MatteFusionGZ iPhone Theme

MatteFusionGZ is one of the most Beautiful WinterBoard Themes for iPhone


MatteFusionGZ_Iphone_Theme_V3_by_gzalomoscoso_002
Download MatteFusionGZ iPhone Theme



9)Matte iPhone UI v1.1 Theme

Matte iPhone UI v1.1 - yet another beautiful iphone theme


Matte iPhone theme UI_v1_1
Download Matte iPhone UI v1.1 Theme


10)o theme for iPhone

o theme for iPhone - Great iphone theme with very beautiful icons


o_theme_for_iPhone
Download o theme for iPhone



11)Plastics Theme for iPhone

A Sleek and Clean Theme for your iPhone


Plastics Theme for iPhone
Download Plastics theme for iPhone




12)Simple Blue Power iPhone Theme

Nice and Clean Theme for your iPhone


Simple_Blue_Power_For_iPhone
Download Simple Blue Power iPhone Theme


13)Soft v2 Theme for iPhone

A Nice Theme with more than 100 icon sets for two variations, Soft™ and Soft™ Light


Soft_v2_Theme_for_iPhone
Download Soft v2 Theme for iPhone



14)Blue Theme for iPhone

A dark blue beautiful theme for your iPhone


Blue_theme for iPhone
Download Blue Theme for iPhone



15)CUBE theme for iPhone

An excellent theme for your iPhone with a beautiful wallpaper


CUBE theme for iPhone
Download CUBE theme for iPhone



16)iBlue iPhone Theme

A clean blue theme


iBlue_theme_for_iPhone
Download iBlue iPhone Theme



17)NewYork Theme for iPhone

Now take the NewYork city on your iPhone with this theme


NewYork Theme for iPhone
Download NewYork Theme for iPhone



18)Kyle's Halo 3 iPhone Theme

Kyle's Halo 3 iPhone Theme has UNSC Wallpaper,Caution tape dock, 49 app logos, Status bar with halo 3 logo in center


Kyle__s_Halo_3_iPhone_Theme_by_KyleRobinsonCustoms
Download Kyle's Halo 3 iPhone Theme


19)Matte Nano iPhone Theme

An iPhone theme made to complement the Matte UI theme that you saw earlier


Matte_Nano_theme_for_iPhone
Download Matte Nano iPhone Theme

20)Ocean Theme for iPhone

An iPhone theme made by a guy who havent used an iPhone yet!


Ocean Theme for iPhone
Download Ocean Theme for iPhone



21)Point theme for iPhone

Point theme comes with 5 icon docks, Live Clock, Spring Jumps etc.


point_theme_for_iPhone_by_version3_002
Download Point theme for iPhone

22)Radiance 2.0 Theme for iPhone

A nice iPhone theme with more than 150 beautiful icons


Radiance 2.0 Theme for iPhone
Download Radiance 2.0 Theme for iPhone



23)The Street Theme for iPhone

A different style theme for iPhone

The Street Theme for iPhone
Download The Street - iPhone Theme



24)Wizardy Theme for iPhone

A Harry Potter Style theme for iPhone


Wizardy Theme for iPhone
Download Wizardy Theme for iPhone


25)ChocoMilk Theme for iPhone

Another beautiful Theme for your iPhone with 208 icons sets, StatusBar, Wallpaper, Dock etc


ChocoMilk Theme for iPhone
Download ChocoMilk iPhone Theme


26)Black Neon Agua iPhone Theme

A dark beautiful Theme with more than 207 icons sets, StatusBar, Wallpaper, Dock, PSD templates etc

Black Neon Agua iPhone Theme
Download Black Neon Agua iPhone Theme

27)Glasklart 2.4 iPhone Theme

Really beautiful Theme with more than 150 icons sets, lock screen sliders, custom badges, SMS bubbles and popup dialogs.

Glasklart 2.4 iPhone Theme
Download Glasklart 2.4 iPhone Theme

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