★ iPhone Apps on the iPad

iPhone Apps on the iPad

Monday, 8 March 2010

Brian X. Chen at Wired, on the default iPhone apps that aren’t present on the iPad:

But if you recall, the iPhone ships with some apps that appear to be left out from the iPad: Stocks, Calculator, Clock, Weather and Voice Memos. What gives?

Apple didn’t respond to a request for comment, but I’m willing to guess Apple will just stick those apps in the App Store for a free download, and they’ll be the same apps as they were on the iPhone. After all, it’s unlikely there’s much to do with those particular apps to make them visually special for the iPad.

Actually, it’s sort of the opposite problem. It’s not that Apple couldn’t just create bigger versions of these apps and have them run on the iPad. It wasn’t a technical problem, it was a design problem. There were, internally to Apple (of course), versions of these apps (or at least some of them) with upscaled iPad-sized graphics, but otherwise the same UI and layout as the iPhone versions. Ends up that just blowing up iPhone apps to fill the iPad screen looks and feels weird, even if you use higher-resolution graphics so that nothing looks pixelated. So they were scrapped by you-know-who. Perhaps they’ll appear on the iPad in some re-imagined form this summer with OS 4.0, but when the iPad ships next month, there won’t be versions of these apps. At least that’s the story I’ve heard from a few well-informed little birdies.

(There is, alas, no secret “widget” mode for iPad in OS 3.2, either.)

Some (maybe even most?) iPhone games will work well as-is, on the iPad. Not just technically, but in terms of being fun and feeling right. But non-game iPhone apps that are just upscaled on the iPad are going to feel weird. And the run the app in a little iPhone-sized rectangle in the middle of an otherwise black screen mode is even weirder, I think. A 3.5-inch screen is just totally different than a 10-inch screen.

On the whole, it’s actually rather un-Apple-like that they’re even allowing iPhone apps to run unmodified on the iPad. It’s a huge compatibility win, of course: an instant market of thousands and thousands of titles. Given the runaway success of the App Store and the fundamental technical similarities between the iPhone and iPad, it’s the sort of decision that most companies wouldn’t even think twice about. But it’s undeniably a sub-optimal user experience. iPhone apps on the iPad are a “good enough” thing, not an “exactly right” thing. Most companies — the ones that wouldn’t even see it as a tough decision whether to allow iPhone apps to run on the iPad — settle for “good enough” all the time. Apple, on the other hand, usually goes for “exactly right”.

I’ll go so far as to predict that by the time Monday April 5 rolls around, it’ll already be an established meme that non-iPad-optimized iPhone apps are to the iPad what Classic apps were to Mac OS X — something you’ll make do with “for now” but can’t wait to abandon for the real thing.

I’m not saying it’s a mistake that Apple is allowing the iPad to run iPhone apps. I’m just saying that the iPad is not a big iPhone.

I so can not wait...

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Survey: 75% of iPhone Users Have a Wholly Inappropriate Relationship With Their Phones

Today in insane, hilarious push polls: Apple iPhone addiction among college students. Conducted by Stanford University researchers, this poll actually asked whether respondents feel that their iPods are jealous of their iPhones. However, it missed a golden opportunity to ask if the students felt that their iPhones are jealous of their 30-racks of Natty Light (my estimate: 13.2% say yes).

The researchers surveyed 200 iPhone-owning students, 70% of whom have owned their iPhones less than one year, on their oft-inappropriate relationships with the gadget. Some of the most important (read: funniest) findings:

  • 75% admit to falling asleep with their iPhones. 0% would admit what happened when the lights went off.
  • 30% of the respondents checked the box reading "I consider my iPhone to be a 'doorway to the world,'" which allows the researchers to say "30% of respondents consider their iPhone to be a 'doorway to the world,'" even though nobody actually says that.
  • Under the question "Losing my iPhone would be...", 41% checked "a tragedy." Write-in responses included "Betty White."
  • 8% admitted that they at some point have thought "My iPod is jealous of my iPhone." 100% of those respondents giggled while telling their friends about that response.

The survey is framed like a serious inquisition into the possibility of iPhone addiction having disastrous social effects, but those involved are reluctant to actually brand iPhone addiction a medical problem on par with alcoholism or drug addiction. In fact, Tanya Luhrmann, who oversaw the survey, said, "I don't think it is really unhealthy. I think they really like their iPhone."

There's also the little problem of whether the choice of smartphone really matters--modern smartphones, be it a Motorola Droid, Palm Pre, Google Nexus One, or BlackBerry Curve, pretty much all do the same stuff, and their owners have essentially the same relationship with them as iPhone owners have with their smartphone of choice. But until we have a survey that details how many Droid owners "pat" their phones, we'll have to just defer to these results.

[Via LiveScience]

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Topics:

Technology, Magazine, surveys, iphone, Apple, addiction, Science and Technology, Technology, Apple iPhone, Consumer Electronics, Electronics

As an Iphone user, I know this to be totally true. After using blackberry's for over a decade, the user experience has caused me to use my smart phone in a fundamentally different way. It's tough to explain the why...

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Google Voice Comes to iPhone, Palm Pre - NYTimes Bits Blog

The spat that erupted last summer among Google, Apple and AT&T over Google Voice remains unresolved, which means the app for the popular call routing and calling service from Google is still not available on the iPhone.

But Google is not waiting for a thaw in the frosty standoff. The company is following up on its vow to bring Google Voice to the iPhone “one way or the other,” in the words of Vic Gundotra, the vice president of engineering for mobile apps at Google.

On Tuesday, Google unveiled a spruced-up mobile Web version of Google Voice tailored to the iPhone, as well as the Palm Pre. Vincent Paquet, senior product manager for Google Voice, said the new mobile Web version of the product is as good as the native app, which runs on Android mobile phones.

Of course, iPhone users were always able to point their mobile Web browser to m.google.com/voice to access their Google Voice accounts. But plenty of things didn’t work right. For example, making calls was a two-step process and the outbound caller ID feature didn’t work, meaning that whoever received the call couldn’t see who was calling, which is one of the more compelling features of Google Voice. Mr. Paquet said that all those problems have been solved, and that the new version of Google Voice also offers free text messaging.

Mr. Paquet said that the spat with Apple remained unresolved. “We haven’t heard back from Apple on this,” he said.

In August, Apple told the Federal Communications Commission that it was still pondering Google’s application for Google Voice to run on the iPhone. Quite a bit of finger pointing ensued, with Apple and Google publicizing their exchanges with the F.C.C.

Mr. Paquet said that the decision to improve the mobile Web version of Google Voice for the iPhone — and for any mobile Web browser that understands HTML5 — is not meant as a slap to Apple or AT&T.

“It’s a way to make sure that people who have been asking to use Google Voice on the iPhone have a way to do so,” he said.

And of course, Google is releasing the mobile browser version of Google Voice just in time for it to run smoothly on Apple’s soon-to-be-released tablet computer.

Impressive work around for not iphone app allowed yet. Check it out!

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Could a Tablet Replace Your Notebook? - TheAppleBlog

PC World’s Jeff Bertolucci recently posed the rhetorical question, “Could a tablet replace your notebook?” He referenced not only Apple’s anticipated tablet computer but also new PC tablets like the one from Microsoft and HP that was pitched at CES, the chatter about which inclined him to wonder if a tablet/slate would work as a suitable notebook replacement.

Bertolucci thinks that for folks who use their laptops and/or netbooks primarily for light-duty web work like email and casual surfing, the answer may be the affirmative, and of course many have pretty much switched to using their iPhones or iPod touches for that type of duty. A tablet would presumably provide a larger display size as well as greater feature depth, so for that cohort, and in that usage context, such a machine could be quite satisfactory, and a step up from the handhelds in terms of performance.

However, for those of us who do serious production work on our laptops, not so much. I’m resolved to keep an open mind, but I’m exceedingly doubtful that a tablet will be a really well-suited tool for workaday production use.

Of course there are many as yet imponderables, especially in the context of an Apple tablet, such as whether the machine will support the standard Mac OS and application software or will run with a variant of the iPhone OS, limiting one to iPhone apps, and if there will be some provision for supporting a work-worthy external keyboard and mouse, rather than limiting users to touchscreen input.

On the OS support front, recent scuttlebutt is not encouraging. Earlier, Gizmodo reported new intelligence from someone they say has been a reliable source in the past that the new tablet will be basically an “iPhone on steroids,” and will be running an ARM CPU on the iPhone kernel rather than Intel Core power with the Mac OS, so Mac OS applications will not be supported. If that is accurate information, then it would pretty much rule out the Apple tablet as a serious work platform as far as I’m concerned, and along with prognostications of a $1,000 price tag, I would say good luck with that, Apple.

If the iTablet/iSlate or whatever really is going to be an “iPhone on steroids,” that would also make prospects for external keyboard and pointing device support murky, to say the least.

I simply can’t conceive doing production work on a machine without a physical (QWERTY) keyboard. I’m only a “semi-touch” typist, but I’m pretty fast, using most of my fingers in an idiosyncratic typing technique I’ve developed over the years — part visual and party spatial reference — and I find the lack of tactile feedback with touchscreen virtual keyboarding unacceptable for typing more than a paragraph or two. Not a problem, perhaps, for tweeting and texting, but not the thing for long-form typing projects.

Both handwriting and voice dictation support could have potential. I use MacSpeech Dictate a lot for entering text both as straight dictation and for transcribing material drafted by hand. Efficient and accurate handwriting recognition could potentially condense those operations into one, but only if scribbling on the tablet proved ergonomically comfortable. My flirtations with using handwriting recognition in OS X have not been encouraging, and personally, I would miss the tactile satisfaction of putting pen to good old low-tech paper, which seems to help me organize my thoughts more effectively.

Without Mac OS support, Dictate is out (along with much else), although MacSpeech or some other developer might eventually fill that void with an iPhone OS compatible dictation app. I’m not going to hold my breath waiting for that. I anticipate that I’ll be using laptops as my do-all tools for years to come yet.

How about you? Can you envision a tablet, especially one running the iPhone OS, displacing your laptop?

Related GigaOM Pro Research: Is The Age of the Web Tablet Finally Upon Us? and Rumored Apple Tablet: Opportunities Too Big to Ignore

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An iPhone Lover’s Take On The Nexus One

Screen shot 2010-01-12 at 3.31.25 AMLast week, I attended the Google Android “Nexus One” event. As you may have heard, they gave many of us in the audience the device to try out. I decided that before I wrote anything about it (other than saying on television that it’s a “nice little device“), I would give it a real shot. So here I am, a week later, with my thoughts on it. To be clear, this isn’t meant to be a full review or overview, for that, see our review here. Instead, I’m going to come at this from the perspective of a pretty hardcore iPhone user of the past two-plus years.

And to start off, I’ll come right out and say what everyone will want to know: Do I think the Nexus One is better than the iPhone? No. There are certain things it does better (I’ll get to that), but overall, if I had choose one, I would still choose the iPhone — specifically, the iPhone 3GS. Is that my bias talking as someone who has used the device on a daily basis for over two years? Maybe a bit, but overall I do believe that while the Android phones are rapidly catching up to the iPhone, they are still not quite up to that device’s quality.

Lest you think I’m a complete newbie to the Android platform, I’ve actually had and used a number of Android devices over the past year or so. I still have a G1 unit, as well as the myTouch3G. I’ve also used the Droid quite a bit since its release. Each of those devices is solid in their own regard when compared to 99% of the phones on the market. And the Nexus One is the best yet. But none are the iPhone.

I’m going to focus on the three biggest things that stand out in my mind about the Nexus One as compared to the iPhone (both good and bad).

Google Apps

Praise of the iPhone aside, there is no question what the Nexus One does better: Google apps. Every single Google app is better on the Nexus One (and all Android phones, for that matter, but on the Nexus One it’s more obvious because this device is the fastest). Gmail, Maps, and Google Voice in particular absolutely blow away their counterparts on the iPhone (of which only Maps is a native application, and Google Voice, famously, isn’t available).

Screen shot 2010-01-12 at 3.33.14 AMIt’s hard to describe just how great Google Voice is on Android. When I set it up, I had to confirm maybe three or four things, and I was all ready to go. In two minutes, my Google Voice number completely took over my Nexus One. This included getting not only getting all Google Voice incoming calls and voicemails, but doing outbound calls with my Google Voice number as well. This is absolutely the future of number portability, and that no doubt has the carriers — and likely even Apple – spooked.

Gmail is also ridiculously better on Android because it includes things like native support for starring messages, labels, and threading. Again, this is true of all Android phones, but the Nexus One showcases how much better Gmail is on Android than on the iPhone because it’s the fastest. If there is one thing that makes me want to use Android every day, it’s Gmail. And that won’t change unless Google ever (or ever is allowed to) build a native Gmail app for the iPhone.

Maps offers a number of features on the Nexus One that aren’t on the iPhone native version. This includes Latitude (which can run in the background), and Navigation. Other Google apps, like Google Sky Map and Google Goggles are also pretty cool, and useful to varying degrees, and again, only available for Android.

Third Party Apps

Maybe the hardest thing (or Apple’s greatest strength, depending how you’re looking at it) in using an Android device after being accustomed to the iPhone is the app difference. Simply put, iPhone apps, as a whole, are much, much better than Android apps. Maybe that’s because Android apps aren’t quite as mature yet. But I don’t know. The Android Market has been around for over a year now, and the fact that there still isn’t a Twitter app that’s as good as the top five iPhone Twitter apps is a bit odd to me. Seesmic for Android is the closest yet, but it still gets blown away by the polish of apps like Tweetie on the iPhone.

Likewise, none of the games are nearly as good on Android as they are on the iPhone. It’s not even close. On the iPhone, some of the 3D games rival the console versions, or at the very least, the handheld console versions. On Android, we might as well be playing Pong.

All that said, there are a number of apps that are useful on the Nexus One in ways they couldn’t be on the iPhone. That includes the instant messaging apps (again, Google’s own seems to be the best), and Pandora. Pandora on the iPhone is great, but you have to it open at all times. On the Nexus One, it’s brilliant because it can play music in the background while you do other things. Obviously, this issue (background apps) has been talked about in the past ad-naseum, so I won’t dwell on it here.

Again, it’s worth repeating that the best Android apps are all Google-made. That’s not true on the iPhone where most of the best apps aren’t Apple-made. To me, that speaks to the power of Apple’s platform. Android’s platform will continue to mature no doubt, but so will the iPhone’s. It has to be worrisome for Google that the divide is still this wide.

Hardware

Screen shot 2010-01-12 at 3.38.01 AMThe Nexus One hardware is in some ways superior to the iPhone. For example, I’ve never been a fan of the iPhone’s plastic backing, which it received after the first generation (which had an aluminum back). The Nexus One has more of a solid rubber and aluminum back that feels nicer. HTC, which makes the device, has also finally managed to get a removable battery backing that isn’t awful or ugly.

The front of the Nexus One leaves something to be desired in my opinion. It’s the closest yet to the iPhone in terms of sleekness, but whereas the iPhone is almost one smooth surface except for the one button indent, the Nexus One has a face that is broken up by its frame and the silly trackball that Google keeps insisting manufacturers include. I have never once used the trackball, nor do I intend to. It’s a waste of space, and makes the device look and feel cheaper.

While the Nexus One does have a nicer screen than the iPhone, it has a downside too. The OLED screen is much harder to see in daylight when compared to the iPhone’s screen. This is the same problem the new Zune HD has, and it really is a problem. In the dark, these screens look beautiful, better than the iPhone’s — but it’s not always dark. And when outside during the day at time, it’s almost unusable.

Instead of the one button that the iPhone employs, the Nexus One sticks with the standard 4-button (not including the scroll ball) Android approach. These buttons take a little getting used to, but can be powerful if used correctly. That said, I’m still not sure Android’s hardware wouldn’t be better served if these were software-based. There are a number of ways to get to Search via these buttons, for example. And while I get that this is Google’s thing, I find this repetitive, and in some cases confusing. One method to do that would be fine.

The Nexus One’s 5 megapixel camera does seem to take significantly nicer pictures than the iPhone’s 3 megapixel variety. But the biggest advantage of the camera pay be its LED flash, which is pretty powerful (though not fantastic for taking pictures in dark rooms still). I’d be shocked if the next version of the iPhone didn’t gain both of these upgrades.

The single biggest problem I have with the Nexus One hardware is likely a combination of hardware and software. I mis-click on things way too often on the Nexus One. While the device’s touch screen is obviously a huge improvement over the original G1’s, it’s still nowhere near as accurate as the iPhone’s. I’m not the only one who has noticed this. I often find myself mis-hitting icons, mis-typing letters, and the touchscreen mixed with the Nexus One web browser is simply not very good at all (try the menu system on espn.com to see what I mean). Apple is great at nailing the little things, and I’m not really sure why the touchscreen mechanics are so much better on the iPhone. But they are.

Speaking of the touchscreen, whereas before it was just odd that Google wouldn’t include multi-touch support in its apps, now it’s just annoying. The little “+/-” magnifying glass that shows up when you should just be able to pinch to zoom is beyond lame. And it may be even worse when viewing/manipulating pictures on the Nexus One. I’m not sure if Google still has their gentlemen’s agreement with Apple not to use the multi-touch gestures, but Palm seems to be using them just fine.

One Device To Rule Them All

Screen shot 2010-01-12 at 3.39.20 AMIf you were to ask me to describe in general terms why I like the iPhone more than the Nexus One, it would be hard to do. On paper, Nexus One seems to have a lot going for it, including a nicer screen, a better camera, a faster processor, etc. But using them side by side, when it comes to regular, everyday use, the iPhone (again, the iPhone 3GS) still wins.

Perhaps the single biggest reason that I like Apple products, and their software, in particular, is the attention to detail the company puts in. In my mind, that’s exactly what still separates the iPhone from all the Android phones. It’s the little things. The things that are almost too small for you to even notice, but the make the experience subtly better.

Android is like a very nice painting done entirely with broad strokes. The iPhone is more like a masterpiece in which every little detail has been meticulously defined. Just as people have different tastes in art, people will have different tastes when it comes to the iPhone versus the Nexus One. But that doesn’t change the fact that some pieces of artwork are considered to be a masterpieces, while some are considered to be merely very good.

If you’re an iPhone user who is sick of AT&T or just looking for a new device, I’m not sure that the Nexus One will be enough to satisfy you. Both Jason and Mike of TechCrunch have successfully switched from the iPhone to the Android platform, but both will admit that there were speed bumps (well, Jason will anyway — while Mike will privately, then deny saying such things).

Jason made some compelling arguments a few days ago about that switch, and how it takes time to get used to Android. I definitely agree with that. And think I could get pretty comfortable with Android. But the point is, I don’t really want to. In my mind, the iPhone is still the better device. Not better in every regard, but better overall. The Nexus One comes close, closer than any Android phone yet, but it cannot snatch the iPhone’s cigar.

Further, the problem with switching to something like the Nexus One now is that even if you think it’s better than an iPhone, a new iPhone is inevitably coming in another 6 months or so that will be much better than the Nexus One. Who knows, maybe we’ll even see it on Verizon this year, which would negate at least half of the complaints about the device.

And, of course, there will be better Android phones coming down the pipeline as well. So if I were an iPhone user thinking about switching (which again, I’m not), I’d probably wait to see what Apple announces in June and then see what Android phone is available by then if the next iPhone doesn’t blow you away.

It’s impressive how far these Android devices have come in a year. But the software/hardware combination still lacks the refinement of the iPhone. Maybe by this time next year, with Google now taking a more hands-on approach, they’ll have a device that can match Apple’s. But they’ll still likely lack the apps. And the iPhone will still likely lack the best Google apps. But it’s good to have competition. And it’s good to have two companies that can play off each other and push innovation — while at the same time, changing the industry. It’s becoming very clear that Google and Apple will be those two.

Nexus One image

Company: Google
Launch Date: December 11, 2009

The Nexus One is the Google Phone launched on January 5th, 2010. The Phone is sold at google.com/phone and it will be soon available at T-Mobile.

The phone runs on a Qualcomm 1 GHz Snapdragon chip, has a super… Learn More

iPhone image

Company: Apple
Website: apple.com/iphone
Launch Date: January 1, 2007

Apple’s iPhone was introduced at MacWorld in January 2007 and officially went on sale June 29, 2007, selling 146,000 units within the first weekend of launch. The phone (as well as its newer self, the… Learn More

Google image

Website: google.com
Location:Mountain View, California, United States
Founded: September 7, 1998
IPO: August 19, 2004

Google primarily provides search and advertising services, which together aim to organize and monetize the world’s information. In addition to its dominant search engine, it offers a plethora of tools and platforms including its more popular… Learn More

Apple image

Website: apple.com
Location:Cupertino, California, United States
Founded: April 1, 1976
IPO: 1980

Started by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, and Ronald Wayne, Apple has expanded from computer maker to include consumer electronics over the last 30 years, officially changing their name from… Learn More

Information provided by CrunchBase

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Nexus One vs iPhone, Droid & Palm Pre - Total Cost of Ownership

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Mashable: iPhone Apps List 2010: 700+ Apps Reviewed by Category

iphones imageAs we begin 2010, there are over 100,000 iPhone apps available for download — an overwhelming array of choices, but plenty of gems if you know where to look.

To help you out, we’ve compiled all of Mashable’s iPhone app reviews in a definitive list to kick off the year. From social media, to business tools, to just plain cool, the iPhone does it best with these App Store standouts.

Put your downloading hat on — there’s a lot of awesome in our iPhone Apps List 2010!

PS. Look out for more updates to this list throughout the year.

Social

iphone social image

Whether you’re talking about social media, or actually interacting with other humans face-to-face (shudder), there’s a plethora of apps that will help you connect, keep in touch, and avoid any unintended faux pas.

70+ Free iPhone Apps for Social Media Mavens

10 Fantastic iPhone Apps That Use Facebook Connect

5 Great Examples of Facebook Connect on the iPhone

29 Twitter Apps for the iPhone Compared

FriendFeed on iPhone: Comparing the Options

10 Essential iPhone Apps to Avoid Dating Disasters

5 Must-Have iPhone Apps for Wine Lovers

10 iPhone Apps That Bring Holiday Cheer

10 iPhone Apps to Help You Survive the Holidays

Business & News

business iphone image

Show your BlackBerry brethren that the iPhone also means business. These apps will help you get work done and stay on top of what’s happening in the news.


8 Fantastic Free Business Card Apps for the iPhone

10 iPhone Apps to Avoid Work Disasters

14 iPhone Apps With Push Notification for Productivity

A Guide to Better Web-Working From Your iPhone

10 iPhone Apps to Manage Your Job Search on the Go

50+ Free iPhone Apps to Make You Richer

Top 30 iPhone Apps for Organization and Productivity

40 Free Apps to Read Breaking News on Your iPhone

5 of the Best iPhone Apps for Political Junkies

Entertainment, Music, & Games

iphone games image

The iPhone is like holding a multiplex, a rock concert, and a Wii in the palm of your hand — that is of course if you have the right apps in tow. Check out these great games and other amusements that will surely keep your accelerometer… accelerating.

60+ Free Classic Tabletop Games for the iPhone

20 Free Role Playing Games for the iPhone

iPhone TV: Top iPhone Apps for Live Streaming Television

100+ Free Sports Apps for the iPhone

10 Free Music Based Games for the iPhone & iPod Touch

Social Music: 5 of the Best Free iPhone Apps

Star Trek on iPhone: 11 Apps for the Ultimate Movie Experience

5 iPhone Apps for Pulling Off Pranks and Tricks

Social Media Break: 5 Free iPhone Apps to Fight Midweek Malaise

Family, Shopping, & Travel

iphone family image

The iPhone is a great tool for honing your domestic prowess. These apps will help keep the kids in line, get your dream vacation in gear, and hopefully save you some money in the process.

15 iPhone Apps to Tame the Kids

20 Fantastic Free iPhone Apps for Parents

Back to School: Top 10 iPhone Apps for Students

11 iPhone Apps for Stress Free Family Travel

11 Essential iPhone Apps for a Road Trip

10 Best iPhone Apps for Dog Lovers

5 Great iPhone Apps for Pet Owners

5 of the Best iPhone Apps for In-Store Savings

Miscellaneous

Some apps could save your life, spark your creative passion, or just plain WOW you. These apps don’t quite fit in the categories above, but still deserve your attention — if you’ve got any space left.

20 Creative Apps For Your iPhone

10 Amazing Augmented Reality iPhone Apps

7 iPhone Apps That Can Save Lives

7 Soothing iPhone Apps to Help You Relax

Top 10 Free iPhone Apps to Lose Weight

Top 6 Augmented Reality Mobile Apps [Videos]

Images courtesy of iStockphoto, JulNichols, pmtavares, GreenPimp

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Bump Brings Digital Contact Exchange to the Masses

This post is part of Mashable’s Spark of Genius series, which highlights a unique feature of startups. If you would like to have your startup considered for inclusion, please see the details here. The series is made possible by Microsoft BizSpark.

Name: Bump

Quick Pitch: Bump makes connecting as simple as bumping two phones together.

Genius Idea: Applications supporting the electronic exchange of contact information, of which there are many, promise a much more convenient and environmentally-friendly experience than the standard business card swap alternative. Digital information sharing, however, is a great-in-theory concept that has yet to become standard-in-practice.

Thanks to a little bump from Apple and the novelty of the app itself, Bump — an iPhone and Android app for instant contact and photo exchange with a bump (literally) — could be the app that actually follows through on that promise and converts us all from paper to digital digits.

The just-bump-it app lets you swap photos and contact details, supports Facebook integration, stores your bump exchange history, and even lets you bump phones with friends to compare mutual contacts.

The application has become pretty darn popular by mobile standards, with 7 million downloads across iPhone and Android devices. Plus, Bump just recently launched their iPhone API, which means iPhone application developers can integrate Bump functionality into their own apps.

The API practically guarantees that Bump will continue to become even more prevalent and prove to be a practical and viable alternative for information exchange at events (even those outside the Valley).

Sponsored by Microsoft BizSpark

BizSpark is a startup program that gives you three-year access to the latest Microsoft development tools, as well as connecting you to a nationwide network of investors and incubators. There are no upfront costs, so if your business is privately owned, less than three years old, and generates less than U.S.$1 million in annual revenue, you can sign up today.

Entrepreneurs can take advantage of the Azure Services platform for their website hosting and storage needs. Microsoft recently announced the “new CloudApp()” contest – use the Azure Services Platform for hosting your .NET or PHP app, and you could be the lucky winner of a USD 5000* (please see website for official rules and guidelines).”

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iPhone Now The Most Popular Phone In The US

iphone trophy

Ranking cell phone companies is a tough thing to do. Some of these companies have a bunch of popular handsets, whilst others have just one or two yet manage to sell as many or more. Rank the companies by cumulative sales across all of their lines and the results will swing one way; rank them model-by-model, and they might look completely different.

Such is the case with the iPhone, according to the latest numbers from The Nielsen Company. While RIM’s marketshare with their BlackBerry line is still nearly double that of Apple’s, the iPhone has now surpassed everything else to become the most popular phone in the US.

The iPhone’s lead is fairly tight, coming in at 4.0% of all mobile phone owners while the BlackBerry 8300 series follows closely behind at 3.7%. The rest of the list is made up primarily of feature phones, outside of appearances by the BlackBerry Storm and the BlackBerry 8100 series in 7th and 10th respectively. As the iPhone 3GS doesn’t make an individual appearance on the list, we’re assuming that they’ve combined the 3G and 3GS into one product line.

Screen shot 2009-12-22 at [ December 22 ] 10.53.00 AM

A few more interesting tidbits gleaned from the Nielsen report:

  • The most popular reason people pick pre-paid phones isn’t because the lack of contract — that’s actually #4 — but because the plans are more straightforward. It’s followed by “No monthly bills” and “Emergency use only”.
  • 21% of households now use mobile phones only, with no land line to call their own. This is up from 15% in 2006
  • 15% of households now own at least one smartphone

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iRewardChart Gets Your Kids To Shoot For The Stars… And Behave

If you’ve got young children, there’s a good chance you’ve worked out a system to convince them to behave themselves and do their chores. In the old days, they called this an allowance. But many families have moved on to systems that are a bit more complex, like progress charts they hang on their refrigerator. That’s where iRewardChart

comes in. The new startup makes an iPhone app that looks to help parents keep track of the childrens’ good behavior, and reward them appropriately.

The startup, which is a a recent graduate of the Adeo Ressi’s

Founder Institute

, launched an iPhone application earlier this month that you can grab here

(or you can try the free lite version

). When you first fire up the app, you’ll be asked to enter your child’s name, photo, and a set of tasks they are charged with on a weekly basis. Example tasks include things like “Help Mom”, “Clean up toys”, and various behavior categories. When they complete one of these tasks, you reward them with virtual stars.

These stars are the app’s currency. The better your kids behave, the more stars they earn. All the while, they’re looking to get enough stars to ‘purchase’ whatever prizes you’ve made available. For example, you might tell your child that if they earn 30 stars, they can take a trip to the movies. Or you could offer to convert stars in exchange for cash. As with the tasks, these are all up to you to determine (though the app comes with some suggestions).

The premium version of the app (which costs $4.99) allows parents to monitor an unlimited number of children, tasks and rewards. The free version is limited to one child, with a maximum of three tasks. Founder Satyajit Sahu says that the company could also offer multiple versions for different use cases. For example, day care centers could use a version suited for large groups.

You could obviously do most of this with some markers and paper, but using iRewardChart has a couple of advantages. For one, it allows parents to track their child’s behavior over a long period of time, so they can look back and identify any trends. And while the app is pretty basic at this point, Sahu has some bigger plans. He wants to offer a web version of iRewardChart that would let kids monitor their performance, and he also says that the app will soon be able to sync between multiple phones (so two parents can share one account). iRewardChart could eventually offer parents and kids something akin to a ‘banking for kids’ service, allowing children to monitor their current star count as an analog for real money.

iRewardChart image

Website: irewardchart.com

iRewardChart is an iPhone application that helps get kids to behave using a rewards system. Learn More

Information provided by CrunchBase

For those of like me with young kids, here is an app that helps them see visually their rewards for positive behavior. Simple, I like it

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Filed under  //  app   iphone   irewardchart   kids  
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