Monthly Archives: July 2012

Apple’s Walled Garden Is Infested With Zombies

Every time Apple holds a keynote or earning call they love to brag about how many apps are available in the App Store. Right now Apple’s boasting that there are 500,000 apps for the iPhone, which you know, sounds really freaking amazing when you’re thinking about buying and iPhone. Think of all the cool stuff you could with 500,000 different apps.

Yes, the App Store is awesome and it’s packed with some truly solid apps, but the truth is that most of the 500,000 apps that Apple brags about don’t ever get noticed. In fact, a recent analysis revealed that two-thirds of all apps in the App Store are “zombies,”  meaning they never get downloaded, are invisible to users, and have no ranking.

Adeven, a German startup that specializes in mobile analytics and ad verification, just launched their new AppTrace tool today that  can trace how often an app is downloaded, review scores, and overall ranking. Before the official launch of AppTrace, Adeven analyized around 400,000 apps on the App Store to get a big on how healthy Apple’s walled garden is, and the results were fairly abysmal.

“The reality is there are only a couple of thousand apps that really make some kind of downloads,” said Christian Henschel, Adeven CEO. “This is based on Apple’s closed system — it’s tough to discover those kinds of apps. You don’t have proper search, so the only way to discover new apps is through the top listing.”

“If you’re not on those lists, it’s not sure that you’re being discovered by anyone else. The top 25 tend to be the same companies who spend millions of dollars to get to the top of those lists. If you’re an independent, small app publisher, then it’s really tough to be discovered.”

The search functionality in the App Store has always left a lot to be desired, leaving developers on their own to market their apps to gain attention. iOS 6 aims to improve some of the problems with search, and many believe Apple will utilize their recent acquisition of Chomp to do so.

Even if Apple improves search though the biggest problem for developers is to distinguish themselves from their competition. After all, when the App Store already boasts 1,899 flashlight apps, how different can you really be?

Source: GigaOM





Five Ways To Replace Safari’s RSS Reader In Mountain Lion

The simplest way to bring back RSS to Safari is with Daniel Jalkut's extension.

Mountain Lion’s version of the Safari browser brough many great things: a unified URL/search bar, iCloud tab syncing and some neat new gestures (try pinching when you have a few tabs open). What it also did was remove the RSS button, replacing it with the Reader button found in iOS. This – apparently – pissed off a lot of people.

So, for those of you who used this button daily, we’ve put together a list of alternatives. None of them will give you the same functionality, but all of them are great RSS readers which work in slightly different ways.

First, a word about Safari’s weird RSS implementation. The browser would detect when a site contained an RSS feed and allow you to click the button to access it. However, all it did was to show you that feed in place, replacing a list of articles on a page with a simplified list of articles on a page, with the test summarized and pictures shrunken.

The more usual use for RSS is for a client app (or web-service) to “visit” those pages for you by sucking in the RSS feed (pretty much a list of new articles, sometimes containing their full text) and organizing them into grouped lists for you to browse all in one place.

Thusly equipped, you can check to see what’s new on hundreds of websites in mere minutes, narrowing in on anything interesting.

Whenever I have seen anyone using Safari’s RSS feature, I have seen them visit a page and use it as a kind of “Instapaper” view to cut out ads and other distractions. In this case, the new Reader feature is arguably a perfectly adequate replacement for RSS. That said, let’s look at some apps:

Reeder

Reeder will remind you of its iOS origins

Reeder started as an iPhone app, then moved to the iPad, and then to the Mac. Like most of these RSS apps, it syncs with Google Reader, letting you mix’n'match apps on different devices, and even the same device, while keeping them all up to date.

Reeder’s schtick is its speed and its simple, well-designed and gesture-based interface. If that sounds like it has brought a lot of baggage over from iOS, that’s because it has. Syncing is fast, and if you have a trackpad you can swipe and pinch your way through articles as quick as you like, and then just flick a couple of fingers to send it off to the browser to read.

You can also send articles off to Instapaper, Evernote and pretty much any other place you can think of. And don’t worry: those services you don’t need stay hidden.

Reeder ($10) is the app I use on my Mac, and it used to be the one I used on my iPad until I switched to the superior Mr. Reader

RSS Menu

RSS Menu stays out of the way until you need it.

 

RSS Menu takes a different approach to feed reading. Instead of a big window containing all your news, it instead lives up in your Mac’s menubar and notifies you of updates via Growl. You can click on the icon to drill down into individual feeds, and you can send them off to Instapaper to read later, or share them via Twitter, or even tear off a feed or story and save it in its own window.

The app pulls from Google Reader (or course) but can also check Safari feeds (in older versions of OS X), Twitter and even your iTunes podcast feeds, which can then be played back using the in-app media player.

If you are more interested in just quickly dipping into the sea of information being sprayed at you every day than taking a long swim, then this $2 app is probably the perfect RSS reader for you.

NewsRack

 

NewsRack is great for keyboard junkies.

NewsRack ($8) used to be my Mac RSS reader before Reeder (and lately, before I all but abandoned the Mac for my iPad). It is the most “traditional” of the apps listed here in that it follows the interface style of NetNewsWire, long the best reader not just on the Mac but the best reader, period.

Your subscriptions (and their optional containing folders) are in the left column. Click one to see a list of articles in the next column and – finally – see the article itself in a pane on the right.

NewsRack is all about keyboard shortcuts, and you can hack your way through a thicket of news in short order, without ever touching a mouse. The app syncs with Google Reader, but you can use it in standalone mode too, should you hate yourself, or somehow believe that your life is a little too long.

Fun fact: NewsRack was, in its iPhone incarnation, called NewsStand. Any guesses as to why the name had to be changed?

Google Reader

Keep it simple with Google Reader.

The daddy of all Mac and iOS RSS reading, Google Reader quickly took over as the feed-syncing solution of choice when the iPhone launched. While it offers lightning-fast syncing for app (they have to pull updates from one central place rather than querying every single site on your list), it also offers a great web-based interface.

Despite a recent(-ish) update which was hated by many, Google Reader still lets you speed through feeds using keyboard shortcuts, offers a wealth of reading stats and – important for those whose work depends on seeing the latest news – the most up to date list of headlines thanks to the fact that it is web-based and always “in-sync.”

Google Reader also scratches the Safari RSS itch thanks to its bookmarklets. You can use one to subscribe to the current page or – and this one might be the most attractive for Safari RSS refugees – you can view the current page in Google Reader. It’s not as clean as the Apple version (it is Google, after all), but it is fast and easy. And best of all, it’s completely free.

Subscribe To Feed Safari Extension

When Mountain Lion was released to the public last week, Mac developer Daniel Jalkut (of MarsEdit fame) made this Safari extension available. It does one thing: monitors the current web page for RSS feeds and lights up a button in the tool bar if one is available. Click this button and the feed will be sent to your RSS reader of choice.

What it doesn’t do: subscribe directly to a feed in Google Reader; let you read the RSS feed items in Safari; write your blog posts for you.

Sure, you can do this kind of thing with a bookmarklet, but an extension is simpler and leaves a crowded bookmarks bar clear. Free.





Be The First To Find Out Who Mitt Romney Chooses As VP With “Mitt’s VP” App

The times sure are a-changin’, and we’re now in an age where political leaders are announcing running mates via mobile apps. Much like Barack Obama’s decision to announce VP running mate Joe Biden via text message, Mitt Romney has decided to announce his VP via a mobile app entitled “Mitt’s VP.”

Mitt’s VP will send users who have signed in using MyMitt or Facebook an exclusive push notification as soon as Mitt has made his decision — putting users in the front row for one of Mitt’s most important decision. They promise not even the press will know before Mitt’s VP users (unless of course the press also downloads the app).

Social media and mobile apps have become one of the largest distributors of information, and for politicians, they can make or break them with a single tweet. Anyone rooting for Mitt will surely want to be first to know, so depending on which mobile operating system you use *cough* Android *cough*, you’ll want to pick up the app from your respective app store.

Oh yea, Mitt, if you want the vote of Android users, you may want to get with the times and change that Android Market logo to a Google Play logo — just sayin’.

Source: Mitt’s VP Google Play Store: Mitt’s VP App Store: Mitt’s VP





Romney campaign builds iOS, Android app for VP announcement

Here’s one way to get people to download your app: announce that it’s the first place you’re going to reveal the highly anticipated choice of your running mate. That’s what 2012 Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney’s campaign did on Tuesday.

The free app is (rather unimaginatively) titled “Mitt’s VP.” It’s is available for iOS and Android devices.

A Romney campaign press release proclaimed Tuesday: “Users of the app will be the first to get the news on the biggest political decision of the year through an instantaneous alert on the one device most people carry around the clock — their phone.”

It’s still a mystery when the VP pick will be named, but it will be before the Republican National Convention, which kicks off August 27.

Romney’s campaign is updating Obama’s own VP announcement method in 2008 (via text message) for this era, which is undeniably the era of native mobile apps.

Hopefully the Romney campaign’s second smartphone app effort includes a thorough spellcheck this time around. When Romney’s “With Mitt” app was introduced in May, it became an almost-instant punchline for misspelling America as “Amercia.”

President Barack Obama’s reelection campaign also revealed its own mobile app on Tuesday, an updated iOS app. Obama, however, doesn’t have a major news hook  to drive downloads like a running mate to announce — he already has one.



Gmail iOS app updated with smoother animations & the ability to save picture attachments

Google updated its universal iOS app today with a couple of noteworthy improvements including smoother animations and scrolling on iPhones and iPod touch, and the ability to save picture attachments to the iOS photo library. Picture attachments can now be saved to the photo library by tapping and holding an image. The update also includes the usual bug fixes.

What’s New in Version 1.3

- Smoother animation and scrolling on iPhone and iPod touch.
- Save picture attachments to your photo library. Touch and hold an image to save it.
- Bug Fixes




New Gorgeous Checkers Game For iPad Blends Analog Gameplay With Digital Charm

Checkers. On your iPad.

If you’ve never been to a Cracker Barrel restaurant, then I feel sorry for you. Where I live, Cracker Barrel is where you go for hearty, good ol’ fashioned, country cooking. Breakfast is always especially good.

The only times I ever played checkers growing up was at Cracker Barrel. While you wait for your food, there are boards set up around the restaurant with rocking chairs. There’s something about sitting down with a friend or loved one to just play a simple game of checkers. In the age of Xbox LIVE, Draw Something and Scrabble apps, face-to-face gameplay is sadly becoming a thing of the past.

A new iPad game called Checkers blends traditional board gaming with pixel-perfect digital charm.

Developed by former Apple and Square designer Louis Mantia with his partner Brad Ellis, Checkers is about as simple as it gets. It’s classic checkers with none of that Game Center or OpenFeint fuss. Your iPad becomes a virtual checker board.

Move pieces on the board with your finger, and notice the attention to—a small shadow appears over the board as you move a piece, for example. There’s no computer to play against; you have to play with another human in front of your iPad. (I mean, you could play with yourself, but that just seems awkward.) There are different boards and colors to choose from, and everything looks stellar on the new iPad’s Retina display.

Visit the website on your iPad, slide to download (just because it’s neat), and you’ll be taken to the App Store. Checkers costs $5.





Jonathan Ive on How Apple ‘Nearly Shelved’ the iPhone

Yesterday, we reported on an appearance by Apple design chief Jonathan Ive at the UK Trade & Investment department's Global Business Summit on Creative Services in which he talked a bit about Apple's design philosophy and its focus on making great products rather than simply trying to maximize profits by cutting corners.


The Telegraph has another report on Ive's appearance, highlighting his discussion of how the iPhone was "nearly shelved" as Apple struggled to deal with a number of issues, apparently including a search for a proper proximity sensor that would reliably turn off the device's screen when it was held to the user's face.
"We nearly shelved the phone because we thought there were fundamental problems that we can't solve. With the early prototypes, I held the phone to my ear and my ear [would] dial the number,” he said. “You have to detect all sorts of ear-shapes and chin shapes, skin colour and hairdo...that was one of just many examples where we really thought, perhaps this isn’t going to work.”
Ive's comments on his experience with early iPhone prototype come just as a number of such prototype designs have surfaced in court documents filed as part of a legal battle between Apple and Samsung.

Apple actually began work on a tablet before the iPhone project got underway, with one early tablet prototype from that 2002-2004 period having surfaced just two weeks ago. Apple was working on a phone at the time, but once Jobs realized that Apple could bring the multi-touch interface of the tablet to a phone, the company focused its efforts on the iPhone project and essentially set the tablet project until it was reborn as the iPad.


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AutoCAD 2012 and 2013 Do Not Yet Work With Mountain Lion
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Jony Ive Says Apple Nearly Axed iPhone Due To Flaws With Dialing

Apple is one of the world’s only companies that isn’t content to push out a great product with a few flaws. They want everything to be perfect. It’s one of their biggest strengths, but it also prevents a lot of neat products and ideas from reaching production. It turns out that the iPhone was no different during its inception, and even after all the cool prototyping and public demand for a great smartphone, Apple nearly axed the iPhone before it was launched.

Apple’s chief designer, Jony Ive, stated in a recent interview that small design flaws with the iPhone nearly caused it to get shelved, because even though the iPhone was good, it wasn’t excellent until they figured out how to fix some fundamental problems, like the proximity sensor.

“There were multiple times where we nearly shelved the phone because we thought there were fundamental problems that we can’t solve. [One problem involved an early prototype] where I put the phone to my ear and my ear dials the number [accidentally]

We have been, on a number of occasions, preparing for mass production and in a room and realised we are talking a little too loud about the virtues of something. That to me is always the danger, if I’m trying to talk a little too loud about something and realising I’m trying to convince myself that something’s good.

You have that horrible, horrible feeling deep down in your tummy and you know that it’s OK but it’s not great. And I think some of the bravest things we’ve ever done are really at that point when you say, ‘that’s good and it’s competent, but it not’s great.”

Apple’s ability to focus on a limited number of products is one of Apple’s greatest strengths according to Ive. In the interview he stated that he feels Apple does not get credit for its willingness to reject devices and ideas. Ive’s philosophy is that Apple should only manage a few number of products so they can invest an incredible amount of care into each device.

Source: The Independent





Leather Camera Cases Protect And Prettify

Classy.

 

One of the best gifts I ever bought for my camera was a hand-made leather ever-ready case. These two-part cases not only look better the older they get, but they offer a whole lot of protection. I have dropped my Panasonic GF1 more times than I will ever admit to you, and it doesn’t even have a dent or scratch. Well, not from dropping it anyway.

But my handsome case looks like a piece of junk next to these gorgeous half-cases from Korea’s Gariz. You can pick up models to fit most high-end compacts and mirrorless cameras, but today we’ll take a look at a new addition for the Sony RX100.

The case covers the bottom half of the camera, like a pair of long lederhosen on a shirtless German. It screws into the tripod socket with a captive catch, and provides its own socket in a better place: in line with the lens itself. The stitched leather cover also had a finger-grip on the right (as you hold it to your eye) for, well, better grip.

The price is a reasonable KRW 76,000, or around $68, which is a steal if you consider that it has a solid metal plate for a base.

My full-coverage two-part case does have one advantage, though: it makes my camera look like a film camera, and therefore nobody wants to steal it, even in the dodgiest neighborhoods.

Source: Gariz

Via: Digital Photography Review





Reminder: The Dangers Of Texting While Driving [Infographics]

By now, we should all know that texting while driving is a danger not only ourselves and our passengers, but to everyone we share the road with. With over 1 million new mobile users a week in the U.S., that makes for a scary number of possible distracted drivers. The temptation is there, especially in young drivers, but as AT&T has shown us, “It Can Wait.”

PSA announcements, such as AT&T’s, can have a lasting affect or simply fade with time, but the dangers remain. That’s why we can always use a friendly reminder, to put us back into a responsible frame of mind. So here are a few recent infographics to refresh your memory about the dangers of texting while driving.

Be safe everyone!

Sources: CarInsurance.org | OnlineSchools.com