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  • Twiddle

    News, iPhone | Tuesday July 7 2009 7:51 pm | Comments Off

    Twiddle is a paddle ball game app, in which you must destroy blocks with a bouncing ball while keeping the ball in play and racking up as many points as possible. The retro-tech savvy will immediately recognize Twiddle's similarities to classic games Pong and Arkanoid. The addition of blocks which appear and disappear at random really adds a level of difficulty that makes Twiddle a challenging diversion. Things get even more interesting with the inclusion of special blocks and giant boss blocks. Compare your high scores against the entire world!

    Amazon Spits Delicious Library for iPhone Out of App Store

    News, iPhone | Tuesday July 7 2009 7:41 pm | Comments Off

    amazon_kills_delicious_library

    Amazon, citing new provisions of their API/data terms of use, informed Delicious Library developer Wil Shipley that if he didn’t immediately remove Delicious Library for iPhone from the iTunes App Store, they’d remove his ability to use Amazon APIs and data from all of his products, including the long-standing Delicious Library for Mac.

    Just when we thought Apple had a hold on mind-boggling app blocking. Sigh.

    TUAW quotes the relevant new passage:

    (e) You will not, without our express prior written approval requested via this link , use any Product Advertising Content on or in connection with any site or application designed or intended for use with a mobile phone or other handheld device.

    So, according to Shipley:

    Delicious Library for iPhone isn’t coming back as long as we’re using Amazon’s APIs, unless they decide to make an exception to section 4e.

    Which he says he’s been told they aren’t going to do at this point.

    Is this just another big company stumbling around in confusion about new mobile technology and how it’s used, ready to rectify it when public outcry makes them aware and uncomfortable. Or is this a sign that Amazon has big plans for this new mobile technology themselves, and they don’t plan to share?

    This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

    Amazon Spits Delicious Library for iPhone Out of App Store


    Quick App 3.0: G-Map East and West Now Feature Turn-by-Turn, Voice-Guided Navigation

    News, iPhone | Tuesday July 7 2009 6:53 pm | Comments Off

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    G-Map from XRoad sent us a postcard from their drive up highway 3.0 and let us know they’ve come back with great new features like real-time voice guidance and turn-by-turn arrows.

    And as always, since G-Map 1.3.1 downloads its maps to your iPhone, you don’t need a data or Wi-Fi connection to use them, which comes in handy when in-between cities and off the grid.

    Both G-Map East [$34.99 - iTunes link] and G-Map West [$34.99 - iTunes link] are currently on sale at a reduced price in the App Store. So, if no-subscription, download-to-your-iPhone turn-by-turn GPS navigation appeals to you, and you decide to give it a try, let us know if it gets you where you’re going.

    This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

    Quick App 3.0: G-Map East and West Now Feature Turn-by-Turn, Voice-Guided Navigation


    Another turn by turn app with voice for the iPhone

    News, iPhone | Tuesday July 7 2009 5:30 pm | Comments Off

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    Many months ago I received a review copy of G-Map for the iPhone. It had its own maps and turn by turn directions, but no voice guidance, and North was always up. Apple was limiting nav apps at that time, and I had real trouble with G-Map. I couldn't load it on my iPhone. It kept locking up about halfway through the process. Extensive back and forth with the developers in Japan came to nothing, so I gave up. Finally, last April, my colleague Steve Sande was able to load it, and reviewed it for TUAW.

    Now, with iPhones having new hardware and new software, G-Map [App Store] works and is certainly a competitor to the subscription-based AT&T app. You buy G-Map in one of several editions. G-Map West, at US$34.99, covers the Western States, and G-Map East covers, you guessed it, the Eastern U.S. It is also priced at 34.99. It gets a bit tricky, because some states like Illinois, Michigan, Tennessee and Wisconsin are split. If you travel all around those states you will probably want both editions.

    There is also a California edition for $19.99, and one at the same price for New Jersey and New York. Versions for Canada and Europe are coming. All the G-Map modules require iPhone software version 3.0.

    So how does it work? Pretty well, but with some caveats. It's accurate at getting your position. The voice directions are quite audible, especially compared to the distorted AT&T app. The on-screen display gives you your speed limit, distance to your next turn, distance to destination and time to destination. It also plots major intersections in a very detailed 3D view, which is helpful. This works in the largest 185 metro areas.

    Another plus is that all the maps are on your phone. If you slide out of AT&T's service area the maps are still there; in contrast, the Telenav-based AT&T Navigator app will not work if you don't have data coverage, as the maps are downloaded on-demand.

    There are some downsides. The POI database is pretty thin in smaller towns. From Southern Arizona it couldn't find the Phoenix Airport. It probably would have found it when I was closer, but even a POI search didn't bring it up. As I was sitting at a long established car wash, it said no car washes were nearby. It did better with restaurants, banks, and hospitals. Like the AT&T app, there is no landscape mode, and you can't get access to your address book, which is just plain silly.

    It looks like the database, which comes from Navteq, has some errors, as do all such systems. Navigating to a restaurant, G-map reported it was on the left, when it was actually on the right.

    Unlike the AT&T Navigator, G-Map has no real time traffic, but it does provide info from Navteq's traffic statistics to predict trouble areas.

    Even with some weakness, G-Map is a worthy competitor to the AT&T iPhone app. If you have the room on your phone (G-Map West is 824 MB), you can navigate without worrying about cell network access.

    It's cheaper than a monthly subscription would be over time, although there is no word when maps will be updated and what the cost will be. If the G-Map developers clean up the POI database, and add a lot more to it, I think they may sell a lot of apps. As it is, for getting to places where you know the address, it works about as well as the AT&T Navigator at a fraction of the cost. Of course more choices are coming, including the much discussed TomTom app, so you may want to wait it out and see what other offerings come along.

    Here are some screen shots that show some of the major features:

    Another turn by turn app with voice for the iPhone originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 07 Jul 2009 19:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)Another turn by turn app with voice for the iPhone originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 07 Jul 2009 19:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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    Delicious Library iPhone app yanked from App Store

    News, iPhone | Tuesday July 7 2009 3:18 pm | Comments Off
    The iPhone companion app for the popular Delicious Library media-cataloging application has been removed from the App Store, but not at Apple's request.

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    Mac News Briefs: CalDigit ships 1TB RAID system

    News, iPhone | Tuesday July 7 2009 3:01 pm | Comments Off
    The CalDigit VR mini was first announced in April; it supports RAID Level 0 and 1, or JBOD configurations and costs $699. Also, Layers, RealBasic, and VideoFlashConverter all saw updates on Tuesday.

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    WWDC Demo: Coolness Test and Spin the Ball

    News, iPhone | Tuesday July 7 2009 2:45 pm | Comments Off

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    Coolness Test (iTunes link) is a well-executed game of skill where you tap a green button as it moves around the screen. You have to avoid the red button, and both move around the screen with each tap. The developers found people were playing for extraordinary lengths of time, and I can see why. You can enter a sort of trance as you focus on the movement of the buttons. It might even improve hand/eye coordination, but all videogames say that, don't they?

    Unfortunately Coolness Test, despite the low price of being free, suffers from over 3,000 negative reviews and less than 600 positive ones. Why? If you read the reviews, it's pretty much the deal with any of these one-trick pony apps: you either love it or hate it. I think it's unfortunate the developers called it a "coolness" test, when wrapping it in the obvious skill test it is would have been more apropos. But it is free, and if you're into button-induced trances, it'll do the trick. There's nothing functionally deficient about the game that I saw, so the reviews are simply people who thought it would determine their actual coolness, I guess.

    Spin the Ball (iTunes link) is a bit more toy than game but it is what it is. Swipe your finger quickly across the ball on the screen, then use the accelerometer to "balance" the spinning ball on your finger. Just like a Globetrotter, you can keep spinning the ball with your finger, thus infuriating the Generals. Spin the Ball is also free, and seems to summon less rage by reviewers than Coolness Test, but I'd say it's the lesser of these two apps.

    WWDC Demo: Coolness Test and Spin the Ball originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 07 Jul 2009 16:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)WWDC Demo: Coolness Test and Spin the Ball originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 07 Jul 2009 16:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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    First Look and giveaway: iShotgun Pro

    News, iPhone | Tuesday July 7 2009 2:00 pm | Comments Off

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    I'm pretty easy to please when it comes to iPhone games. For example, I've had Monopoly [App Store] on my iPhones since the app first appeared, and so far I've played 201 games. My other favorite? Apple's Texas Hold'em. So why would a shooting app be interesting to me?

    iShotgun Pro [US$1.99, App Store] is a fun little shooting game from developer Yossi Malki in which you use a pump-action shotgun like my trusty Remington Model 870 to shoot clay targets. You go through 15 timed rounds shooting at single and multiple clay targets or falling bullseyes and bombs. There are three different levels of play so you can build your skills.

    Just like in real clay pigeon shooting, you can yell "Pull!" to have the targets launched. There are also ways to launch the clays automatically or by tapping a button on the screen. You get different point levels for hitting various colors of clays, and try to avoid the black targets which reduce your point total. In the rounds where bullseyes and bombs are dropping, you need to avoid hitting the bombs. To aim, you can either use the iPhone's accelerometer or just tap where you want to shoot.

    Continue reading First Look and giveaway: iShotgun Pro

    First Look and giveaway: iShotgun Pro originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 07 Jul 2009 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)First Look and giveaway: iShotgun Pro originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 07 Jul 2009 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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    Opera CEO: Major US carrier deal imminent

    News, iPhone | Tuesday July 7 2009 1:43 pm | Comments Off
    The Opera Mini browser will soon have widespread distribution on mobile handsets in the U.S., according to the company's chief executive.

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    DIY Camera Flash For iPhone

    News, iPhone | Tuesday July 7 2009 1:26 pm | Comments Off

    Even with the iPhone 3GS's shiny new 3 megapixel camera, we still see some complaints about the lack of a flash bulb on the iPhone. Ryan wanted one so badly that he decided to make his own out of a Mophie JuicePack. He simply cut it open, connected a bright white LED and a tiny switch, and now he can add a little light whenever he needs to take a picture just by holding down a button on the case. You can check out a step-by-step guide to make your own at his website.
    [via CrunchGear]

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