Daily Archive for April 28th, 2008

Muxo add subtitles to mp4 for iPhone

“entropic” from HandBrake forum wrote a little tool called “Muxo” to add subtitles to mp4, so your iPhone can play with soft subtitle. Muxo is a small Mac OS X cli-tool that adds subtitle tracks to existing mp4 files. Now, it’s in a really early stage, and the tool only reads srt files. You can direct download the tool: Muxo 0.3.3 from here or from my mirror.

screenshot:

Play with Quicktime Player:

Play with iPhone:

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Secrets Hidden in iPhone: iControl and Jabber Support?

Anonymous reporter told TUAW that according to code found in the latest firmware release, Apple is working on a new iPhone application called iControl. Like Apple TV and other remote controllers, it would allow the iPhone to connect wirelessly to local iTunes libraries and browse through and play media from those sources.

TUAW is told that a media navigator will allow you to view videos, play podcasts, listen to music and even support shuffle playback. The screenshot shown here shows some of the localizable strings for the iPhone-based application. There’s obviously no timeline for release, but since the SDK event back in February, it’s been rumored that Apple would release some official iPhone apps of their own, and iControl might be the first.

Later, same person told TUAW a new XMPP framework has been spotten in the latest iPhone firmware. XMPP refers to the open source standard developed by the Jabber community for instant messaging. Remember back in March when Apple announced it would support native instant messaging? In a nutshell, it looks like Apple’s new iPhone-based chat will be built on Jabber/XMPP.

Unfortunately, we’re told that this XMPP support remains in a private framework and will not be available to 3rd party SDK developers. Apple has made a strong commitment to sand-boxed development, allowing developers little access to the underlying OS and frameworks. Single-purpose apps like games should thrive in this development environment while less bounded utilities like social networking apps may struggle–or at least have to depend strongly on web-based servers.

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