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Posts Tagged ‘iPhone’

One Billion iPhone/iPod touch App Downloads

April 23rd, 2009

App Store One Billion Sold

Today, the Apple App Store surpassed 1,000,000,000 app downloads. It reached this milestone after a little more than nine months in existence. It is significant, auspicious, and whatever other hyperbolic adjectives you’d care to stick into this sentence. It bears reflection, discussion, and outlook onto what this means for the mobile device space.

The iPhone app store came into being following the clamor for applications by the iPhone/iPod touch community. Weeks after the iPhone was released, developers found ways to crack into the firmware of the device, access APIs and create hardware driven apps for the device. Demand for a sanctioned SDK supported by Apple built up to near impossible levels. Finally, Apple relented and released an SDK, and announced the opening of the App Store with the release of the iPhone 3G and the iPhone 2.0 software update.

The App Store was met with a skeptical eye by many, including yours truly. After all, with no background applications allowed, and many Jailbroken apps doing at least what the Apple sanctioned apps could do, why would people go to the App Store? And, how could Apple’s method succeed where others (Palm, Nokia, the app distribution methods created by the carriers) had failed? Well, people went to the App Store, and they went in droves.

The App Store took something which is patently not an original concept - applications built for a mobile device - and made them easy to access and purchase. Rather than going to a developers site, downloading a package, hooking your device up to your computer, transferring the files, setting up the package on your phone, configuring the settings and finally using the app, the App Store stripped out all of the processes and made it dead simple to use an app. Open the App Store, find the app you want, hit install, confirm your password, and the app installs and configures itself right there on your phone. Seamless, fast and easy. Better yet, in many cases the applications were reasonably cheap, making it trivial to pile up pages and pages (and pages and pages…) of apps. Apple succeeded by doing what they do best: taking an idea floating around there, refining it down to the simplest and most effective form.

Now that Apple has sold the billionth application from the App Store, what is in store for the future of the platform? Well, using the past nine months as an indicator, plenty of smooth times ahead. Apple has managed to capture the majority of the developer share for the mobile market, despite the sizable headstarts which Windows Mobile and Blackberry held over the App Store. With the release of iPhone OS 3.0, there are more API and tools available for developers to tool around with, and with the install base of the iPhone and iPod touch growing every day, there doesn’t seem to be an end to the massive success of the App Store.

Kudos, Apple, for taking my money. I look forward to paying you for an app to monitor my liver while racing 3D go karts against my friends.

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An Appetite for Applications

February 5th, 2009

Apple's App Store

One of the main problems with Apple’s App store is the fact that it is tied to the iTunes client. Which, of course, as we have noted several times on our podcast, is slow, and tedious to slog through when trying to find a specific app (or anything, really). So imagine my delight at finding App Store, a website which takes the interface of the App Store, but places it onto the web in a much speedier method of finding apps.

While we’re on the topic of the app store, another problem with the app store is not knowing the way an app will look before you buy it. Apps cost money (a lot of them, anyway), and until APple enacts some sort of demo model, we’ll all have to rely on App Theater for our app previewing needs. App Theater is effectively the YouTube of iPhone Apps, taking user generated reviews of various reviews. It’s extremely useful, especially for game apps, which obviously place a demand upon usability and screen real estate.

Other useful iPhone/iPod touch review/preview/search sites: AppBeacon, AppShopper and Apptism.

[some links via Gizmodo]

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Speak to Me Softly (Or Mechanically)

January 26th, 2009

Recently, it has come to our attention here at Geek Troika that people enjoy having things read to them. Why exactly? Is there some root in childhood memories of your parents (or grandparents, or any sort of beloved adult figure in your life) reading bedtime stories to you, or the story time circles from kindergarten? Bah, look at me, I’ve started describing things from the second person position, that’s never good. The point here is that people absorb information in a wide variety of methods. Some pass by fine with text on paper or screen. Others make due with pictures and video. To date, audio has been sort of an outmoded medium of conveying current events and news, especially with regards to highly segmented interests which the Internet has become especially famous for catering to, via news feeds and other methods.

Obviously, it’s impossible to expect a monthly, daily, hourly audio summary of current events, especially with the manner the news cycle has evolved to with updates and reports coming in virtually every second. A few possible audio solutions have come to the attention of us here at Geek Troika, and we thought that a brief introduction to two of these methods would be an insight to where we might be headed with how we consume our news. The main differentiator of these two services from other types of news aggregation methods is that both utilize computer generated audio to read information to you, some more commonly used to say funny phrases like “U R HOT” or any number of cuss words back when computers could first do that sort of thing. Or, at least, I did.

The first service for review purposes which I investigated was PimpMyNews, which takes various news feeds and blogs of your specification, bundles them together, and has a synthesized voice read it to you in a daily podcast. This recommendation came to us by the way of Geek Troika listener Phillip (aka @infoliberation), a user of the service. So, going by his info (har har, I made a pun) I proceeded to sign up for the service and subscribe to some feeds. The selection of news offerings was rather impressive, from many I knew, and several I did not. Most mainstream news sources are supported, and many blogs which I follow on a regular basis were also included as part of the selection process.

The first stumbling block, for me, came in the limit PimpMyNews sets on how many news sources you can subscribe to at once. For your given feed, you can only select ten news sources to hear from on a daily basis. Furthermore, there isn’t any ability to really parse down the content from these sources on your own, so you are completely reliant upon what PimpMyNews chooses to put in your feed. A feature I would like to see the service develop would be subscribe to any number of feeds, and perhaps rotate what sources your hear from each day. For example, I always want a mix of tech, headlines, politics an celebrity news, but the ten sources for this topics would rotate between a predetermined set which I would have specified. Or, the ability to subscribe to tags from certain sources for a particular area of interest (PS3 news, Apple, etc.).

Second: the interface. Ideally, you’ll only have to interact with the interface of PimpMyNews once, because it is very, very annoying to use. Each time I clicked to navigate to a different topic to see which blogs and websites were included, the page refreshed and collapsed the previous topic I was looking at (even if I didn’t want it to). This was annoying to no end to me. I wanted to see if the same blogs under “Gadgets” would also be in “Tech”, and there was no efficient method of doing this! Worse yet, everything I clicked to “subscribe” to a new blog, the entire topic list collapsed down and I was forced to dig through to find exactly what I needed.

Finally, once I had selected all of the blogs I wanted, and subscribed to the iTunes feed PimpMyNews has prepared for me, I waited and was delivered my news stories. And, here’s the surprising fact after all was said and done: it was a pretty damn good service. I thought my biggest problem with PimpMyNews would be the awful mechanical voice which would mispronounce things and speak with the sort of awful cadence that AI voices tend to speak with, but, I was wrong. The narration came out pretty smoothly, and there were very few mispronunciations. The problem, of course, with PimpMyNews, is that there is always something lacking when it comes to getting across written humor into spoken word by something which doesn’t recognized wry wit, sarcasm, and just plain silliness. A sarcastic point which garners a few chuckles while reading text comes across almost uncomfortable when recited by the PimpMyNews audio bots.

Ultimately, I would recommend PimpMyNews to those who don’t really like podcasts, because discussions get tangential and they don’t agree with the personalities of the hosts (Tangential? Personalities of hosts? What does that sound like?) but still enjoy hearing news in the spoken form. I know that sounds contradictory, but it makes sense when you consider that most podcasts are limited in their focus, cover a limited amount of news, and in most cases are released on an infrequent basis (for the pace of the current news cycle, anyway). PimpMyNews allows you to be current, the best advantage of text services, while still retaining the ease of hearing spoken word (you can’t always read when driving, for instance).

The second spoken word service which I checkout was HearPlanet (iTunes store link), an application for the iPhone/iPod touch. HearPlanet combines a whole bunch of things together in one app: location based services, Wikipedia, and spoken word. Basically, the way it works is almost like one of those personal speakers available in museums, which explains the history and details about the various items in front of you. HearPlanet works much in the same way, but with location allowing for different experiences every time you use it. The marketing for HearPlanet plays it as “the world’s first talking travel guide for your cellphone!” I can easily see HearPlanet for this application, especially since it works worldwide. I used HearPlanet just sitting in my house, and I learned all sorts of cool little facts about the immediate area. I’m looking forward to taking it to a city with a little more historical depth (New York, Philadelphia), taking a bus ride around town, and just digging through HearPlanet to learn facts I didn’t know before.

The drawback to HearPlanet is that the mechanical voice is worse then that on PimpMyNews, which can make it much more difficult to sit and listen to things as local roads and monuments which this voice butchers. HearPlanet needs much more refinement on the specific spoken word program they utilize, or perhaps that’s something at a high level which needs to be corrected, but for now, it’s bearable considering how well HearPlanet it able to integrate location with relevant information. It’s reasons like this I’m happy my phone has GPS. HearPlanet WAS a paid application, but since MacWorld 2009, it has been free. If you have an iPhone/iPod touch, I would recommend you snatch it up while you have the chance.

Overall, spoken word services boil down to how good the mechanical voices speaking to you is tolerable or not. Obviously, I have some problems with these voices, but I can bear through it. Before you delve too deeply into any service like this, take the time to see if you enjoy the way these voices sound. It takes a lot to jump from naturally spoken word to mechanically spoken.

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Palm Pre: The Holy Savior, or a Death Rattle?

January 11th, 2009

OK, perhaps I’m being a little too melodramatic with that title. But, it has be said, the Palm Pre has generated the kind of buzz Palm probably wanted for CES. In a year when big tech advancements have stagnated, Palm came in and reasserated themselves as a force in the mobile world. Now, I’ll admit, I possess a certain bias against the Pre. This is based on the fact that I haven’t gotten the chance to get my grubby little mits on the device.

Now, before the cries of “of course! You crazy iPhone users will do anything to trash this device!” Hold your horses, nellie. I was just as jazzed by the iPhone when I first saw as I was by the Pre. There are some extremely interesting and innovative concepts to be considered from the early demonstrations of the Pre. The whole deck of cards concept is a very intuitive way to handle app switching and management. The universal search throughout the device is a brilliant idea from the limited use which was demonstrated. But, that’s the point that I’m trying to get across: everything we’ve seen with the Pre has been LIMITED. LOCKED DOWN to the extreme. Let me do that again. Ahem…EXTREME!!!%

My decision to purchase an iPhone came after 7 intensive months of using the iPod touch. 7 months of exploring every UI tweak and quirk, learning ways to manage battery life, becoming acclimated to the environment. By the time I got my hands on the iPhone this past summer, I had clearly determined that the iPhone was the best mobile experience for me. That’s the issue which Palm faces with the Pre and their new webOS: everything looks nice and smooth during a keynote presentation in the hands of a man who has spent the better part of two years with the device and operating system. The situation will change dramatically in the hands of an everyday user running multiple applications who has their own concept of how actions on their phone should operate.

My first impressions, based on the Palm keynote, will probably end up sounding pretty similar to the first impressions I had in early 2007 about the iPhone, and in late 2008 about the G1: the hardware is nice, the software looks pretty enough, but until it gets out into the real world, everything is moot. What we can say about the Pre is that the first impression is better than what we initially got from the G1 and Android, but perhaps slightly worse than the iPhone. A lot of what I saw in the Palm keynote echoed a lot of what Apple did, from the UI tweaks (the “rubberbanding” bounce when scrolling through contacts, multi-touch zooming, accelerometer movement, etc.) are things basically lifted from the iPhone. Which abolutely makes sense, since John Rubenstein came from Apple, and a cadre of Apple developers who worked on the iPhone now are at Palm developing the webOS.

The unique things which the Pre does, which I have to give Palm above anyone else out there, is intuitively merging and sorting through contact information from multiple sources and organzing it in a well thought out, easy to navigate manner. Taking information from Outlook, Gmail and Facebook, combining it into one contact card and letting you view data from all of them together? Genius. I lust after this for my phone. The iPhone kicked down the door for devices and operating systems which Palm is putting out, and the company is taking full advantage of the opportunity and pushing the market even further forward. As a moble geek, and someone who’s always looking for the next best phone to put in his pocket, I have to admit, I’m really excited by what the future holds.

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Episode 3 - Dash, List, Slash!

November 5th, 2008

Shownotes:

  • Jon discusses Hulu and it’s advertising model.
  • Mattie lets us in on her experience with Google Chrome.
  • Mike tells us about the iPhone app store.
  • Matt discusses the implications of Windows 7.

Our picks of the week:

Mattie - FFundercats Podcast  http://www.ffundercats.com

Jon - Memiary http://www.memiary.com

Matt - John Hodgman’s new book, More Information Than You Require http://www.areasofmyexpertise.com/buy/

Mike - The 700 Hobo Name Project http://e-hobo.com/hoboes/list/

Remember to follow us on Twitter!

Jon’s Twitter | Mattie’s Twitter | Mike’s Twitter | Geek Troika’s Twitter

Here’s the link to download episode 3!

Download

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Google Earth Comes to the iPhone

October 27th, 2008

Google Earth on the iPhone

Man, people might think I’m in love with Apple. Really, I’m not. I love my iPhone. A LOT. And this makes me love it just a bit more. As many have pointed out [Gizmodo, Lifehacker, Boy Genius Report, Boing Boing Gadgets and way more], Google has put out Google Earth for the iPhone. Fully multi-touchable, zoomable, swoopable, and any other touch related gestures you can think of. While it’s not dramatically different from the stock Google Maps app on the iPhone, it offers some whiz bang features and enough polish to blind the people you’re showing off to. Oddly, this app is available on the iPhone before Android, but, hey, I’m not complaining. Available for download from iTunes right now.

[Image via Gizmodo]

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Street View Coming in iPhone 2.2 Firmware

October 27th, 2008

Street view in Google Maps is coming! Well, that is, if you believe Engadget, Mac Rumors and a plethora of gadget/tech sites around the tubes. Also being tossed into the mix are mass transit directions. Most people had their jaws drop to the floor with the whizzy bang feature of “compass view” on the T-Mobile/HTC/Google/Android/Super Rocking Alien Mothership G1, so it’s nice to see the iPhone keep in step and toss in a nifty (if slightly pointless) feature. What gets me really excited is mass transit directions. There are plenty of times when, coming out of a subway, I’ve gotten turned around topsy turvey as my reptillian eyes adjust to the harsh light of the outside world. It burns, I tells ya, it burns!

Oh, yeah, iPhoneYap [via Mac Rumors] has some screenshots if you want to check out things in further detail. One small step for augmented reality, one giant leap for me wasting even more time?

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