• Archives

  • Recent Posts

  • Tweet Push Notifies You Of New Tweets, Uses Your Favorite Twitter App

    News, iPhone | Saturday July 11 2009 4:33 pm | Comments Off

    Today Polar Bear Farm released Tweet Push [App Store], an application that pushes new tweets to your iPhone or iPod touch. Right now when new direct messages or mentions come in, Tweet Push will alert you with the message "You have new tweets!" The cool thing is that Tweet Push works along side your favorite Twitter app to display the tweets. After selecting which app you'd like to use (it must be installed), tapping "View" will bring you to the selected app!

    In a few days, Polar Bear Farm plans to roll out a management page which will let you receive all tweets from your timeline (not just mentions and DMs), change how often your tweets are checked, customize the notification sound, and preview the text from your last received tweet.

    iPhone may debut in Chinese market by early 2010, sans Wi-Fi

    News, censorship, china, iPhone, wi-fi | Saturday July 11 2009 11:30 am | Comments Off

    Filed under: ,

    Two reports from Friday indicate that the iPhone will soon make it to market in China, although the Communist government wants to make sure that users aren't free to use their newly-acquired Apple goodness to criticize official policies.

    Gizmodo published an unconfirmed report that China Unicom may have a deal with Apple to sell iPhones with Wi-Fi blocked. Some of our readers might comment that China Unicom could just sell customers devices that have been upgraded to iPhone OS 3.0, since Wi-Fi doesn't appear to be working properly on many of those iPhones, but the Chinese government wants assurance that Wi-Fi is blocked on any iPhones sold in the country.

    Why? To quote Gizmodo, "it's harder to sniff local packets than ones drifting through a wide-area network." What they're referring to here is the Golden Shield Project, known to many as the "Great Firewall of China." That's the Internet censorship and surveillance project run by the Chinese Ministry of Public Security.

    The Gizmodo post is in turn based on a story by Business Week, which is reporting that Apple applied yesterday (July 10th) to the Chinese Ministry of Industry and Information Technology for a Network Access License to sell the iPhone in the country. Business Week notes that Apple may receive permission to officially sell iPhones in The Middle Kingdom by the time of the Spring Festival in 2010, which occurs in January.

    iPhone may debut in Chinese market by early 2010, sans Wi-Fi originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Sat, 11 Jul 2009 13:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)iPhone may debut in Chinese market by early 2010, sans Wi-Fi originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Sat, 11 Jul 2009 13:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

    TiPb iPhone App Store Picks of the Year

    News, iPhone | Saturday July 11 2009 9:36 am | Comments Off

    tipb_pick_of_the_year

    One year, 56,000 apps, and over a billion downloads later, Apple’s iTunes App Store for the iPhone and iPod touch celebrates its first birthday.

    To mark the occasion, we’re taking our Picks of the Week, where a few of us from team TiPb, bloggers and forum crew alike, bring you our current favorite, funnest, most useful apps, and giant-sizing it to cover the whole year.

    And what’s more — the editors from SPE network join us in picking their favorite iPhone and iPod touch apps of the year as well. Love. Up.

    So what are our picks of the year? Find out after the break!

    TiPb Staff Picks of the Year

    Chad’s Pick: BeejiveIM

    There are a lot of apps I could have chosen for this, but I think one of the biggest has to be Beejive. With the advent of Apple’s Push Notification service and the SPEED of the iPhone 3Gs, Multi-tasking Instant Messaging has become a thing of the past. This application is robust and very configurable. If you aren’t using software 3.0 you can even have Beejive send you emails when someone replies. You can also add custom backgrounds, colors and more. Oh, and it supports many services as well from AIM to Facebook. [$9.99 - iTunes link]

    picture-005

    Chris’ Pick: MLB.com At Bat 2009

    I mentioned this app in the podcast, and truthfully, this app gets used on almost a daily basis. For any baseball fan, it is a must have. Aside from a few missing features (like not listing league leaders, or more detailed stats pages) this app allows you to follow live audio broadcasts for any game, and even features live streaming video for a couple of games each day! For people who are not in the same market at their favorite team, this app is a must. Follow the game live, listen to it live, and watch video highlights. They have also begun offering a new feature - a quick (10 minutes or so) recap of the game with video highlights. [$9.99 - iTunes link]

    Runners up: Flight Control [$0.99 - iTunes link], Texas Hold’em [$4.99 - iTunes link]

    MLB at Bat 2009

    James’ Pick: Twittelator Pro

    Twitter on the iPhone is like Peanut Butter and Jelly…they just work very well together. Twittelator Pro has all the features I need and them some. [ iTunes link]

    Runners up: Peggle [$4.99 - iTunes link] and iTunes App Store App. [iTunes link]

    img_0221

    Jeremy’s Pick: Pocket Tunes

    Pocket Tunes gives you a ton of free radio and you have the ability to listen to everything Sirius XM has to offer including Howard Stern (with subscription) - unlike the watered down Sirius XM application. [$9.99 - iTunes link]

    Runners up: BeejiveIM [$9.99 - iTunes link] and iTunes App Store App. [iTunes link]

    photo1

    Justin’s Pick: Shazam

    One app I always have on my phone no matter what. It’s also led to me listening to music, tagging it, and buying it all on my iPhone! [Free - iTunes link]

    Runner up: BeejiveIM [$9.99 - iTunes link]

    img_0110

    Matt’s Pick: Brothers In Arms: Hour of Heroes

    I know not everyone uses games, but this game is incredibly unique. I chose BIA mainly because I think it was the first application that showed what the iPhone was capable of processing. It also seemed to me that the controls are somewhat close to that of other FPS games. The uniques use of vocal narration accompanied by a significant amount of sound effects and multiple roles help make the user become fully immersed in the game. [$4.99 iTunes link]

    Runners up: G-Map [$34.99 - iTunes link], MyWeather Mobile [$4.99 - iTunes link]

    brothers-in-arms

    Rene’s Pick: Google Mobile App

    Your bring it up to your ear, it activates, you speak, and it gives you results based not only on what you want, but where you are. There are glitzier apps in the store to be sure, more popular no doubt, but this was the first app that made me think it was time for Star Trek to start being jealous of us. “Computer!” indeed. [Free - iTunes link]

    Runners up: Apple Remote [Free - iTunes link], Twitterrific 1.0 [Has been replaced by v2.0 - $3.99 - iTunes link]

    Google Mobile App

    Special Birthday Bonus: SPE Editor Picks of the Year

    AndroidCentral.com Casey Chan’s Pick: Yelp.

    You can always find a great place to eat or see the coolest places around you with yelp. Especially when you’re hungry and wandering the streets of San Francisco after Macworld =) [Free - iTunes link] Yelp

    CrackBerry.com Kevin Michaluk’s Pick: F1 Timing - 2009 Starter Pass

    It’s effing awesome. I actually hold my iPhone in my hand while watching the races on TV. we need this for BlackBerry! [$2.99 - iTunes link]

    picture-17

    NokiaExpert.com Matt Miller’s Pick: Evernote

    Evernote gives me a global tool (across all my devices, Mac, and PC) to capture all my thoughts. The recognition is absolutely amazing and you can take photos of all those post-its and find everything later. [Free - iTunes link]

    Runners up: Pandora [Free - iTunes link] and AT&T Navigator [Free + subscription - iTunes link]

    Evernote

    PreCentral.net/SPE Editor-in-Chief Dieter Bohn’s Pick: BeejiveIM

    Stupendous IM support on multiple platforms, push notifications through an elegant workaround before push notifications were official, and not afraid to charge what the app is actually worth. [$9.99 - iTunes link]

    Runner up: iTunes App Store App. [iTunes link]

    beejiveim_30_0101

    WMExperts.com Phil Nickinson’s Pick: Tweetie

    Most used for me. [$2.99 - iTunes link] [Phil totally broke format and actually listed a half dozen #1s, including Paper Toss. Wheels on the Bus. Koi Pond. Scribble - Rene] [Gimme a break. I've got a 3-year-old! - Phil]

    Runners up: Facebook [Free - iTunes link]. Pocket Tanks [Free - iTunes link]

    photo3

    TheiPhoneblog.com Rene Ritchie’s Pick: App Store

    No, I don’t really get a second pick at the app store, but in summation — and on behalf of everyone here at TiPb and the smartphone app ecosystem as a whole — I’d like to wish the iTunes App Store an APPY ANNIVERSARY. May you continue to grow in quality as you do in quantity, and may this year bring more changes to make all of our experience, developer and user, better and brighter.

    Hopefully we ain’t seen nothing yet! App Store turns 1

    Your Pick?

    You’re part of team TiPb too, so what’s your pick? What app was your Pick of the Year?

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

    TiPb iPhone App Store Picks of the Year


    iPhone 101: How to Access More Than 180 Apps or WebClips via Spotlight on iPhone 3.0

    News, iPhone | Saturday July 11 2009 5:14 am | Comments Off

    iPhone 3.0 Spotlight Search Launch Unlimited Apps

    For some, even the newly expanded 11 Home Screen, 180 (including 4 fixed dock) app slots under iPhone 3.0 isn’t enough. It’s not about need — it’s about want. Luckily, iPhone 3.0 offers another handy, theoretically unlimited way to access apps: Spotlight. According to David Pogue:

    You can install UNLIMITED APPS! Only 180 show up as icons—but Spotlight can find and open all of them! (And yes, we tried. Stopped at 250!)

    So, check off every single one of your 56,000 (maybe?!) apps and sync them over. Then, instead of swiping right through 11 pages only to find the excess unaccessible, swipe LEFT to go to the Spotlight Search screen (or just press the home button again to get there super quick).

    Next, start typing the name of the app, hidden or otherwise, you want to access, and as soon as it appears in the results, tap it to launch.

    Boom. App pack rat bliss.

    Note: Spotlight also shows WebClip icons you’ve bookmarked from MobileSafari to your Home Screen, so you can go crazy with quick access to your favorite websites as well.

    And for those who prefer not to fill up their iPhone with apps, remember you can delete an app when not using it and download it again via the on-board App Store app, without any duplicate charges, any time. Cloud management is a reality, and a second option.

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

    iPhone 101: How to Access More Than 180 Apps or WebClips via Spotlight on iPhone 3.0