iPod Family

My favorite iPod touch apps: Mike R.’s picks

Posted by admin 29 August, 2008 (0) Comment

In contributing my share to our ongoing series of favorites for Mac and iPhone apps, I think I’m the first of our crew to focus on the iPhone’s sleeker sibling. The iPod touch may not have the communications and GPS capabilities of the motherphone, but what it lacks in circuitry it makes up for in panache. I’ve found apps that are kid-pleasers, apps that leverage the touch’s native WiFi location capability, and apps that challenge the brain. (All links are directly to the App Store.)

Comic Touch from Plasq. Although the iPhone’s camera is absent, the ability to edit, annotate and humorize synchronized photos on the touch is a delight. Comic Touch may not be the only app in this space but it’s proven its worth to me during evenings out or when traveling, as my daughters derive endless fun from captioning family snapshots with thought balloons.

Pandora Radio. Making the portable device into a full-featured internet streaming tool is a work in progress, but a WiFi-connected iPod touch with Pandora is an astonishingly fun and surprising music source, a glass-front Airport Express. I love the Pandora web app, so I was prepared to like the miniaturized version — what I didn’t expect was how connecting it to a stereo and letting it play would lead to “Wow, who’s this?” moments. Lacking a microphone, I can’t run Midori or Shazam on my touch — but I can make iPhone users want to use those apps to find out what Pandora is playing through my speakers.

Scrabble. Yes, I know that Facebook users have dartboards covered with pictures of Hasbro’s legal team — I still enjoy the EA version immensely. It’s colorful, easy to play and has the feel of the tabletop game and the tactile letter-dragging fun you expect. Shaking the device to shuffle the rack aside (it feels gimmicky and I never do it), all I really want to add is a copy of the Scrabble dictionary for training and reference.

Location-aware touch. Even without the GPS of the iPhone, I’ve been pleased that so many location-aware apps work just fine on the touch. Where To?, Twitterrific, Urbanspoon and Now Playing — assuming there’s a WiFi network around — behave just as they would on the iPhone, and whether it’s due to the solid location frameworks or thoughtful work by developers, I’m appreciative.

Honorable Mention: Simplify Media, Dot Game, City Transit NYC, and Facebook.

Popularity: 11% [?]

Categories : App Store, iPod Family Tags : , , , ,

My Favorite iPhone Apps: Mat’s Picks

Posted by admin 29 August, 2008 (0) Comment

For my shot at iPhone favorites I’m going with three apps I find myself returning to over and over.

Zenbe Lists (iTunes link) - this is the third-party app I find myself using most often. It’s basically a TO DO list manager, but with a big difference: online syncing. The Zenbe iPhone application interfaces with the online lists that you can manage from your desktop at lists.zenbe.com (free account required). But unlike some other iPhone apps that are front-ends for online services, Zenbe on the iPhone caches all your data locally. That means that you can access and edit your lists even when you can’t get online (e.g. on a plane) and then sync when you get back online. With the absence of notes syncing on the iPhone I end up putting all kinds of things into Zenbe: shopping lists, travel info (flight schedules, etc.), various ideas that come to me on the go, and much more (free).

Moonlight Mahjong (iTunes link) - games are naturally a matter of personal taste, but this 3D implementation of mahjong on the iPhone is first class. It utilizes the standard iPhone gestures for zooming and panning, as well as automatically recognizes device orientation. The full version includes 19 different tile layouts for a very reasonable $4.99; there’s also a free lite version (iTunes link), which will give you a good taste the gameplay but is limited to 3 tile layouts. Moonlight Mahjong does not include sound, but that makes it perfect for listening to your own tunes, which I much prefer.

Pandora (iTunes link) - Pandora has long been my favorite streaming music site, so much so that I run the dedicated Pandora client PandoraJam on my Mac. So I was thrilled when the iPhone version was released with full access to your custom stations. Unfortunately, Pandora is facing problems these days so there’s no telling how long the service will remain up. But for the time being Pandora is my go to app for streaming music (free).

Popularity: 8% [?]

Categories : Analysis / Opinion, App Store, iPhone, iPod Family Tags : , , , , , ,

My Favorite iPhone Apps: Erica’s Take

Posted by admin 29 August, 2008 (0) Comment

favorite iphone applicationsWhen it comes to the iPhone, it’s really really difficult to narrow my app love down to just three picks. So with apologies in advance for all those amazing applications that didn’t make this cut, let me jump in with three choices that I simply do not live without on my (jailbroken) iPhone:

Cydia. When Jay Freeman’s Cydia first debuted, I was hesitant to use it. It sucked up the root partition space like a sponge and its interface was, at best, preliminary. And now, in 2.0, Cydia owns me. It’s simply fabulous. From its command-line Unix support to its fully overhauled interface to its extremely workable update system, Cydia provides a powerful software distribution system, perfect for modern smartphones and a great competitor to AppStore.

Boss Prefs. Boss Prefs offers a wonderful services application. It lets me enable and disable services such as EDGE, Bluetooth and SSH from a central application. Because I only intermittently subscribe to data plans, Boss Prefs ensures that I won’t accidentally start downloading a la carte data that starts at about $500 million (or so) per kilobyte. It also lets me enable and disable my mail accounts, so the iPhone works perfectly for whichever mode I’m in: intrepid Apple blogger at large or private Soccer Mom on the go.

Othello. Othello is my current fidget-game-on-the-go. When I’m stuck waiting somewhere for a few minutes, I pull out Hongtao Guo’s perfect take on Othello. With three playing levels, optional sound and a really nicely designed interface, Othello provides the perfect time waster. There are other free versions of Othello under various names on AppStore but I particularly like this implementation. Although I wish it would put me directly into the game board rather than the welcome screen, that’s my only criticism of a lovely, free application that’s a great deal of fun.

Popularity: 3% [?]

Categories : App Store, iPhone, iPod Family Tags : , , , ,

hands on: the simple joys of Koi Pond

Posted by admin 27 August, 2008 (1) Comment

About a week or so ago, I spent $0.99 at iTunes to pick up a copy of Koi Pond. With all the software that constantly moves onto and off of my iPhone, it should say something that over a week later, Koi Pond is still installed. It’s a little treasure.

Koi Pond provides exactly the experience its title suggests: it puts a virtual Koi Pond onto your iPhone, allowing you to place plants and feed the fish. The fish in question swim around the screen and run away from the rippled waves you create when messing with the water. If you leave your finger still enough, eventually a koi or two will investigate and nibble on your finger before darting off on its pre-existing fishy business.

In theory, there is no point to Koi Pond. It’s there to experience and enjoy. In practice, my elder children issue each other challenges: “Make the worst pond” (no fish, no plants, no sunlight, brown rocks, rotting food) or “Make the most psychotic koi” (one fish, sunlight, lots of splashing), etc.

For $0.99, it’s a great deal on a little toy. Turn off autolock and cheerfully burn out your screen by sitting it on a stand on your desk. The fish will swim and burble ad infinitum. (It helps to have the iPhone docked while doing this.)

Koi Pond is available for iPhone and iPod touch. It costs $0.99 at the iPhone App Store.

Popularity: 4% [?]

Categories : App Store, Gaming, iPhone, iPod Family Tags : , , , ,

Spore iPod game now in iTunes

Posted by admin 26 August, 2008 (1) Comment

iPhone-wielding gamers rejoiced when EA announced a version of Spore for the iPhone, set to debut in September of this year (check out our hands-on with Spore). This week, click wheel iPod owners got a leg up, as Spore: Origins is now available in the iTunes Store [link].

Origins, as the name implies, lets players experience the 1st level of the game, in which you guide a single-cell organism through the primordial ooze. Game play is straight forward: Use the click wheel to guide Jr. around, and the center button to eat other organisms he finds. No word on sharing your progress with the full game once it’s released on September 7th.

If you really can’t wait, you can also download the desktop Creature Creator. Spore: Origins for iPod costs $4.99US.

Popularity: 6% [?]

Categories : Gaming, iPod Family Tags : , , , , ,