Archive for the ‘iPhone’ Category
Hey fuckers! I’m blogging from my iPhone again.
I am having a rather dull and dreary night at work with precious little to actually do.
Covering a war is lively at first and then you settle into a routine. Yes I am as callous and jaded as I sound. I have been covering wars for around 20 years, they’re all pretty much the same. People die, lots of them.
Life is so fragile and we are all so breakable. Its a wonder more of us aren’t killed more often.
The thing about covering wars from a distance, as I’ve mostly done, is you get to see some of the most harrowing scenes of suffering. By the time it arrives on the tv in your living room, its been sanitized and censored, to protect you from images you are likely to find distressing.
I strongly disagree with that. You have just as much right to see the uncensored horrors as I do and my media colleagues should not be denying you from seeing the truth.
I don’t find strong images offensive, but I do think war and the needless slaughter of civilians is extremely offensive.
I guess I picked the wrong job. Or rather the wrong job chose me!
(blogged from my iPhone)
Hey fuckers!
Dig this shit! I now have the ability to post to my blog directly from my iPhone.
At least I think I do. We will find out for sure when I attempt to post this bad boy on my site.
If you’re reading this shit, then it worked. And you can maybe expect more mobile blogging on the future.
I read in the last week or so that there are now over 10,000 apps available for the iPhone and that’s only in the last six months since the App Store opened.
Wow!
That’s a lot of applications for the world’s favourite, ultra-clever smart phone.
Some of them are completely pointless and fun, others are very useful and some are just plain cool. I’ve gone a bit app mad and downloaded loads of them, so many that I am going to run out space soon.
That’s ok, because at some point, I know I am going to have to cull my apps and lose the ones I hardly, if ever use. For now, though I’m all about the apps.
I’ve already reviewed some of my favourite apps, CLICK HERE to magically travel back in time to those heady, crazy days, of August 2008.
Since then, I’ve found some even cooler apps to share with you. Some of them are free, some are paid for, but nearly all of them serve a useful purpose and most of them are used by yours truly on a daily basis.
Google Search
This app has been around since day one of the App Store, but the recent update added a feature that will not only impress your mates, but actually works.
The latest version of Google’s search app doesn’t require any buttons, you put the phone to your ear, wait for the tone to cue you and then speak your search and it understands you and displays your results lightening quick!
Like if you say “ show me pictures of naked women”, it fills your screen with very pretty pictures. And if you have the “safe search” option switched off, you’ll get some hands free porn, which if you think about it, could have some applications of its own.
Seriously, its very cool and a quick demo will blow most people away.
Weather Bug
There are a lot of weather apps for your iPhone, but this one is my favourite.
You choose a weather centre nearest to you from a list provided and the app then displays the temperature, wind speed, along with all the usual stuff like humidity and barometer pressure…in real time.
You can watch the wind change direction and speed while the app is running and it also tells you what the wind chill is, a useful tool when choosing what coat to wear. The app also provides forecasts for the next few days, but here’s the other killer feature, it shows you the most recent satellite weather photo for your region.
This app is a must-have if you dig the weather, or like to know how cold it is outside. Trust me, baby its chilly.
TV Plus
This one is really only of use to you if you live in the UK and subscribe to SKY TV and have a SKY+ box. For those of you who don’t know what I mean (my pals in America!), its a combination TiVO and satellite tv receiver and is my digital platform of choice.
If you have a SKY+ and an iPhone, you will really love this one. TV Plus displays the SKY programme guide for the next seven days, with descriptions for each programme, on every channel. If you’ve signed up for a MySKY account, you can enter your details into the app, then, and here’s the killer bit, once you’re set up, you can enter recordings into your SKY+ from anywhere you have a connection via wi-fi, EDGE or 3G.
I’m not sure if I am explaining this well. Say you’re at work and you’ve forgot to put a recording in for some tv show, it doesn’t matter what. You can find the programme on the virtual programme guide on your iPhone and tap the record button and through some magic voodoo jiggery pokery, the recording just appears in your SKY+ planner as if you entered it with the remote from the proximity of your sofa. Amazing.
Set up is slightly complex, but the step-by-step instructions were very clear and easy to follow — I had it up and running in no time. It probably took longer to sign up for the MySKY account (free from SKY.com) than it did to set up the app and my SKY+ box.
Just be aware that the remote recordings work best when you have more than 30 minutes before the programme begins, otherwise there don’t seem to be any limitations. It’s well worth the price!
iTap
I wasn’t that impressed with iTap initially, but since the most recent update, it really shines. Its a simple app that turns your iPhone into a remote track pad for a Mac and just about anything you can do with a mouse, you can do with iTap, including right clicking. iTap now also has a keyboard, for remote text entry.
I have a Mac Mini connected to my tv and I can do most things with my Logitech Harmony Remote, including control Front Row and iTunes, but the one thing I’ve never been able to do is put the Mini to sleep. With the little white Apple remote, no problem, I press and hold the centre button and voila, my Mini is snoring. I can’t seem to come up with a way to replicate that command with the Harmony remote.
With iTap, I don’t have to, I can just start it and in two taps, my Mini is dreaming of electric sheep.
iTap requires a small piece of receiver software to be installed on your Mac, but it was very easy, just drag it into your apps folder, run it, then from the menu bar icon, select “open on start-up” to add it to your log in items. Then just forget about it.
Mocha VNC Lite
iTap is great, if you can see your Mac’s screen, but what if you can’t?
There are many occasions where I need to do something with the Mac Mini, while the tv is in use and I don’t want to switch over to the Mini to do something quick and simple. Instead I use Mocha VNC Lite.
VNC stands for virtual network control and if you’re running Leopard, its built into the operating system and called screen sharing. Because it is built into the operating system, its very easy to enable, just go into the preference pane under sharing, click the screen sharing box and set a password for remote login. Your Mac is now ready to be remotely controlled.
Mocha VNC Lite allows you to connect to your Mac and control it, with the touchscreen acting as a trackpad with the remote Mac’s output displayed on the iPhone’s screen.
With Mocha VNC Lite, I can start and stop downloads, I can run apps, enter text through the integrated keyboard, all from another room, or even in my back garden. I’ve only got it set up to work within my home network, but people who are better at the real tech stuff can probably get it to work over the internet, from anywhere in the world.
Its a freebie, though there is a paid version, which I should buy myself.
iTalk Recorder
Griffin’s iTalk Recorder is another simple, yet well designed and useful app that does what it says on the tin. It records sound, but it does it very well.
You can choose the quality, from good enough to be broadcast on FM radio to very low, but still listen-able and the length of the recording is only limited by your available flash memory.
Transferring your audio to your Mac is a breeze, there is an application that you need to install which wirelessly connects your Mac to your iPhone and you just drag over the files you need.
This app is works so well that I bet I could use it to do voxpops on the street that sounded good enough to be transmitted on the radio. Of course, I’d look like a dick, walking up to people and making them talk into an upside-down iPhone, but you get the idea.
AirCamLiveVideo
This app is extremely cool and I have absolutely no purpose for it, not even a nefarious one.
AirCamLiveVideo turns your iPhone into a wireless remote receiver for the built-in isight camera in your iMac or MacBook and it also works with the old external isights. It should work with other webcams as well, though best to check before downloading the app.
Again, you need to install a small piece of software on your Mac to transmit the images (and now audio too) from your Mac to your iPhone. Start the software on the Mac, run the app on your iPhone and away you go. It self-configures via Bonjour and you can password protect the live stream to keep prying eyes away.
Like I said, I have no practical application for this one, its just very cool and futuristic. I also think its the most expensive app I’ve bought so far. It was a fiver, but now that I’ve reviewed it, bang that’s coming off next year’s taxes as a website expense.
Now — Geo-networking
This is a weird one and I’ve yet to really work out its usefulness.
This app lets you post a tag on a location in real time, and they only remain there for a day or so. You can also search for other people’s tags.
Posting appears simple, you allow the app to know your location, put in your line of copy and hit send. Be careful what you post and where you post it, though.
The reason to be careful is that when you do a search, you can see what all the other people have posted, complete with directions to get there. You don’t want to be sitting at home posting “sex available, no charge”.
Or maybe, you do.
And yes, I have seen labels such as my example above posted on a map of the world. The app is global and should work wherever you are on the planet.
When you do a search, the app hands off some data to the iPhone’s built in map app, and you can watch a collection of red pins descend across the global. Tap a pin to read the attached description text, zoom in and see where they are or switch to the satellite view.
For me, its an easy, fun way to generate addresses for playing with the new “street view” function added in the iPhone’s software update to version 2.2.
The UK hasn’t been blessed with street view just yet, but most of the continental US has and guess where most of the posters on this app are from? Although bizarrely, Google did have some street views available for an Italian suburb and it does look like London will be added soon, which means I’ll be able to virtually stalk myself.
And speaking of stalking, tell me this doesn’t sound fun. Next week, I’m going to be posting “www.northlondonhippy.com” via this app, at various locations throughout London. If you’re really quick, and you can get there in time, you might catch a glimpse of me and my iPhone in action.
If you don’t, at least you’ll know that you are standing in the exact spot where I stood when I posted it. If that doesn’t make the little hairs on the back of your neck stand up, I don’t know what will!
And that my friends and iPhone fans is my latest collection of super-neat-o-cool iPhone apps, but it by no means complete. There are plenty of others I like and probably my absolute favourite is yet to come. Enjoy!
After my recent flurry of posts about my new iPhone 3G, I’ve noticed lots of new visitors attracted to my site by this particular subject. With the rumours of Apple planning on shifting 45 million more of them next year its likely to remain a popular topic for some time.
And with good reason as the iPhone is the most powerful pocket-sized device available so far thanks to the ability to add additional applications that extend the functionality nearly to infinity. It truly is a Swiss Army Knife of gadgets.
As a result of my recent health problems, I’ve pretty much had the last month with nothing but time on my hands and my iPhone in my hands. I’ve barely put it down, its the first thing I fondle when I wake up in the morning and the last thing I stroke before drifting off to sleep.
As much as I adore my iPhone, and believe me I do, I’m not going to lie to you about the smoothness of the experience. I’ve been suffering with some of the issues and problems you may have read about; apps crashing on launch, apps and updates not installing properly and the dreaded poor signal on the 3G network, but even with these niggles, it is still an amazing piece of kit.
I believe the problems I’ve had are addressable and Apple will be able to fix them through software updates. The last update, to 2.0.2 has already stopped the crashes on the phone itself and since installing it, I haven’t had a spontaneous restart.
I did have to do a full restore though, as I had lost some apps when iTunes tried to install their updated versions. It took a couple of hours and the most recent back-up I had done was around a week old, so I lost some SMS messages and a few other bits of data, but the phone is now working well.
The 3G issues persist for me and it could be that the coverage where I live isn’t that great, but I have trouble believing that, since I live in London. I hope it improves and soon.
I’ve installed dozens of apps already, stretching across 5 home screens and I thought I would share a few interesting ones with you, that you might not have heard of yet.
Simplify Media
Simplify Media is very cool, it allows you to stream your entire iTunes collection (unprotected tracks only, nothing with iTunes DRM), over wi-fi, Edge and 3G to your iPhone and it really works. In real terms, it means there is no storage limit on your iPhone, it will hold as much as your Mac or PC at home. You install a small piece of software on your networked computer, install the app on your iPhone, log into both devices with the same account and your entire musical collection magically pops up on your iPhone and you can play any track! The app is currently free, but after 100,000 downloads, they will start charging for it. Grab it while you can!
Sol Free Solitaire
There are many versions of this popular solo card game, but I like this one, mainly because it is free. I’m not much of a gamer, but I used to play Solitaire on Windows PCs and its nice to have a version to play on my iPhone. The interface is smooth, you tap the card you want to move, then tap the card you wish to move it to and it away it goes. There are several variations to play, my favourite is Klondike 3,
Dual Level
This is another app that’s free, which makes it preferable to the paid versions. Its a simple idea, when you start the app, the screen turns into virtual horizontal and a vertical spirit levels linked to the built in accelerometers. You can use it to level hanging pictures or anything else you might use a spirit level for — very cool!
iVote
This is a simple app which lists poll questions for you to respond to, ranging from politics to personal, with the results available for you to break down in various ways. It’s more geared towards Americas (like almost everything online!), but it is a fun app and a real time waster. I like it!
WhosHere
Of all the social networking apps, this one shows the most promise with its simple, yet focused function. It’s a chat app that uses your location to show you other iPhone and iPod Touch users and their approximate proximity. In other words, its a location based chat application which is very clever. You fill out a profile with as much, or as little (or nothing) and tap the near button — you are then presented with a list of people, their profiles and the approx distance from you. You can set the proximity of your search from as little as 5 miles up to 3000 miles. You can also blur your location, up to 2 miles from where you really are, so you do have options to maintain some privacy. The app’s user base seems to be growing fast and yes, this one is free too.
PhotoSwap
PhotoSwap is very new, its only been available for less than a week (at the time of my writing) and I find it strangely addictive. The premise is simple, you take a photograph on your iPhone and the app sends it to a random stranger, while you receive a photo from the same random stranger that receives yours — that’s the photo swap. Once you receive a photo, you have the option of replying directly to that person with another photo, effectively having a conversation with iPhone snaps. I’ve received all sorts of photos; city skylines, beach views, people’s homes, pets, all sorts really. And before your sick imagination conjures visions of body parts, I’ll disappoint you — I have yet to receive anything offensive and there is a “report” button to tap if you do. The app allows you to chose a user name, plus one line of description for a mini-profile (accessed through the main settings via the home screen not directly from the app) and you can choose to show your location on a map. I would suggest turning off the location stuff if you are at home and only use it when you are out in public. It might sound a bit strange, but try it, I think you will agree that there is something very endearing about using it.
This is just a small selection of apps that have caught my attention, there are literally over 1000 of them available already, with more being added to the App Store every day. Have a look, I’m sure there are some that will appeal to you too.
And I’m still waiting for the two apps I’ll pay for, TomTom navigation software for the car and a SlingPlayer client. I’d lay you odds I have both before the year is out!