Posts tagged iphone

iPhone Gems: Slacker’s On-Demand and ooTunes’ Internet Radio Apps

iPhone Gems: Slacker’s On-Demand and ooTunes’ Internet Radio Apps

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Having previously reviewed quite a few Internet Radio and On-Demand Radio applications for the iPhone and iPod touch, we’re using today’s iPhone Gems to spotlight two more recent releases: Slacker Radio and ooTunes.

If you’re in the United States and have been using Pandora, Last.fm or another program to find music to hear in your car or at home, Slacker Radio is a must-try, free alternative with a great interface and strong search results. By comparison, ooTunes turns the iPhone or iPod touch into a global radio, tapping into nearly 8000 stations from around the world, including many local and national stations for major and minor cities. Read on for the details.

Slacker Radio

We’ve previously reviewed and loved Pandora and Last.fm for the iPhone and iPod touch; now they have a similarly impressive rival. Slacker Radio (Free) by Slacker is, in essence, on-demand radio in app form: it starts by playing the specific content you searched for, then takes you on a path of related “music discovery.”

The first part is critically important to Slacker’s appeal. Thanks to a massive collection of music and comedy programming, you can boot Slacker Radio up, enter the name of a song that you want to hear, and have a pretty good chance of hearing it—the right version—right away; the same thing works with artists of your choice. Contrast this with Pandora, which does a good job if you search for an artist, but may or may not hit the specific song you want to hear, or even start by playing the artist whose song you were searching for. Slacker makes you feel like an archer whose arrow goes through the bullseye of one target and keeps cruising down a similar trajectory, while Pandora’s arrow takes its own path, but hits your targets pretty close to dead center. You can also use Slacker as a more generic radio, playing genre-specific “stations” and digging into narrow categories—“smooth jazz (non-vocal)” versus “smooth jazz,” as just one example. Audio plays back over cellular or Wi-Fi networks, and sounded great in our testing, without any skips or interruptions.

As nice as Pandora’s and Last.fm’s interfaces are, Slacker has come up with something that’s even nicer: a UI that doesn’t just duplicate Apple’s, but rather has its own, attractive multi-pane design, placing track details below album art, while your current “station” information and a button to access the station list are above the art. A simple four-button pane at the bottom of the screen offers play/pause, up to six track skips, a heart button to indicate a favorite track, and a “ban track/artist” button. Double-tapping on the album art adds a volume slider, a button to let you stop the device from going to sleep, and a scaling image of the next album in the song queue, which can be swiped as an alternative to the next track button. It’s very slick—the visual next album preview feature is actually something Apple should include in iPod playback mode. There are, of course, artist and album details, a Buy in iTunes button for songs, and the ability to both save and fine-tune stations you like.

So Slacker looks great, sounds great, and works well; what’s the catch? Well, there are a few. First, like the most recent version of Pandora, the app is ad-supported; Pandora now overlaps text or graphic ads on the screen, while Slacker now inserts an audio and album art ad after every cluster of songs. In addition to being unskippable in the free app, the ads occasionally interrupted Slacker’s audio stream for channels we were listening to, forcing us to hit play to restart playback—a bug. If you want to lose the ads, gain unlimited track skips, and get access to song lyrics, Slacker offers a $4/month service called Radio Plus that expands the program’s functionality. Finally, Slacker is a U.S.-only application for now, which means that the millions of overseas iPhone and iPod touch users won’t have access to it, a shame given how well it’s designed. As a free application, even with its limitations, this is a highly recommendable application for fans of music and comedy; we’ll keep it on our own devices, for certain. iLounge Rating: A-.

ooTunes

By comparison with Slacker, ooTunes Radio 2.0 ($4) from Oogli takes a very different tack: it is a more traditional aggregator and sorter of third-party Internet Radio streams, providing what might be called a network-savvy interface once you’ve tuned in a station. It provides you with access to nearly 8000 different channels, sortable by genre, country, or U.S. city, then looks up album art, artist, and song details for whatever’s playing. If it succeeds in finding those details, it then tries to provide lyrics, cross-reference a list of similar tracks using Last.FM, and offer you multiple options for purchasing the song or a full album containing it—in digital download or CD form from Amazon, iTunes, eMusic, CDUniverse, Half.com, and Secondspin. Additionally, if you’re willing to buy a $20 program called the ooTunes Media Server for your Mac, PC, or Linux machine, ooTunes can stream your iTunes and other media libraries directly from your computer to your device while you’re on the go—a feature that some users may find worth the $24 total price of admission.

While all of these features are nice, as is the fact that the basic ooTunes app provides wide access to city-level local radio stations and national stations from all around the world, the app is hobbled by the quality of the audio and photos it uses. Most of the stations appear to be streaming at a scratchy 32 or 64kbps, well below the “near CD quality” sound people are accustomed to hearing, though there are some 128kbps stations in the collection. Add to that the stations’ heavy advertising content, which admittedly Oogli doesn’t profit from in any way, and it’s hard not to feel as if you’re paying for the app, then paying again with your time as you listen.

Similarly, album art is presented as a tiny thumbnail-sized icon on an otherwise less than beautiful now playing screen: the elements may be similar to the ones in Slacker, but they’re presented with more cluttered iconography, smaller text, and an oversized radio tower graphic that fills most of the display. As smart as ooTunes might be at finding extended track details, it requires you to manually activate the search by selecting a song from your list of recently played tracks.

Additionally, in an effort to leave the iPhone or iPod touch useful for web browsing despite its occupation as an audio streaming device—a really nice idea—ooTunes offers a simple browser with URL and Google search features, but like the rest of the interface, this part could use some more visual polish.

Overall, ooTunes strikes us as a good but not great Internet Radio and streaming app—one that’s a little expensive right out of the gate given that it’s basically repackaging existing Internet Radio streams and leveraging the web to deliver links to related content. Its strongest asset, the large, global database of streaming radio stations, is something that can be tapped into with less expensive and even free iPhone/iPod touch apps; that said, we liked the ooTunes experience of interacting with those stations while having easy access to song lyrics and purchasing links. With more polish and a lower price of admission—perhaps ad- or affiliate-link supported—this app would be easy to universally recommend to fans of traditional radio.

[via ilounge]

2009 iPod + iPhone Buyers’ Guide

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Celebrating its fifth year, the world’s most popular iPod and iPhone buyers’ guide has arrived!

Packed with the latest and greatest new products, the 150-page 2009 iPod + iPhone Buyers’ Guide features more than a dozen new sections. Here’s what’s inside:

  • 100 Best iPhone and iPod touch Apps and Games: With more than 5,500 applications currently available on the App Store, it’s hard to know which apps are right for you. We’ve done the leg work for you in our dedicated roundup of the 100 Best Apps and Games, which highlights the best apps we’ve seen for Apple’s new mobile platform, from racing games and RSS readers to puzzlers and photography apps. A listing of Ten App Developers to watch is inside, as well.
  • Top Accessories for iPod + iPhone: With ratings for well over 2,000 accessories inside, the Guide offers a model-by-model breakdown of the best accessories for each iPod and iPhone, including speakers, earphones, cases, and more.
  • Best of the Year and Readers’ Choice Awards: From thousands of recent releases, iLounge’s editors have selected the very cream of the crop for “Best of the Year” awards. Products from companies such as SwitchEasy, Logitech, Griffin, and Contour Design are honored, along with software releases from Gameloft, Pandora, PopCap Games, and others. For the first time ever, iLounge also gave readers a chance to pick favorites for Accessory Maker, Game Developer, App Developer, and Apple media player of the year, the winners of which can be found in the Guide.
  • iProvocateur and iPod As Art Winners: Find out who took home over $5,000 in amazing prizes from iLounge’s biggest contests ever, and enjoy a gallery of the winners, runners-up, and other notable entries.
  • Complete History of iPod and iPhone Products: Our updated timeline tells the story of Apple’s progression from the first release of iTunes and the original iPod to the company’s dominance of the digital music industry through the iTunes Store and the growth of the iPhone OS as a portable computing platform.
  • Buying and Selling iPods and iPhones: This comprehensive section gives you up-to-date price listings not just for current iPods, but also for older devices, including eBay selling prices for every past model.
  • Complete Color Charts for all iPod and iPhone models: While many think of the iPod as an iconic white device, Apple has released models in a wide variety of colors over the last several years. We round up all the iPods and iPhones for a comparative photographic look at the many different colors of the Apple rainbow.

As always, our 2009 iPod + iPhone Buyers’ Guide is a completely free download. You have a choice between two versions: one is in book-style two-page spread format, which is best for monitors 15” or larger on the diagonal. The other is a full-screen single-page format, available in separate versions for viewing on monitors that are smaller than 15” on the diagonal, and for touchscreen devices including the iPhone and iPod touch. Please download only one version so that others can get their copies quickly. PC users should have Adobe Acrobat Reader 5.0 or later. Mac, iPhone, and iPod touch users can use Safari.

Please tell a friend about the new Guide! We welcome you to share it on your file-sharing network of choice, with friends through e-mail, or though a mirror link (post in comments below). Enjoy!

Alternate iLounge Download Links:


Single page version – (15.6 MB ZIP)


Wide (book-style) version – (15.9 MB ZIP)

[via   ilounge]
1661990_0051

ipod mobile ,is it another ipod copy? no ,it’s a mobile

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a new creative mobile – ipod mobile from china

Rotatable screen ,mtk platform ,wolfson audio chip,so cute , so ipod!

do you want to have it

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[from pconline]

This Week In iPhone Apps: Deer Carcasses and Browser Tabs

This Week In iPhone Apps: Deer Carcasses and Browser Tabs

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This week, we revisit some classics from your (and your grandfather’s) childhood, iPhone browsing gets upgraded, and I play what it probably the best 3D multi-animal hunting game available for the iPhone.

Boulder Dash!: Whether you’re just leaving college or having your third kid, there’s a pretty good chance that you played Boulder Dash as a kid. The official 25th anniversary iPhone edition is as faithful as you want it to be: you can choose either classic, spritey graphics or a modern, cartoonish look, and opt for either an overlaid d-pad control scheme or a new swipe-based system. The game looks great and both control system work a treat, so collecting jewels on the iPhone feels about as natural as it did on the Commodore. $4.99.

Deer Hunter 3D: A hunting video game! What kind of bizarre nerd bumpki—oh, wait, this is actually pretty fun. Deer Hunter 3D for iPhone, licensed from the Walmart-famous Deer Hunter PC franchise, takes you on hunting trips to various locations to shoot various animals with various types of guns. It looks great, and the aiming system—the core of the game—is executed well. The walk-aim-shoot routine seems repetitive at first, but the game has enough unlockable content to keep it interesting for a while. $5.99.

Nightglow: This browser brings proper tabs, more gestures and a few other little odds and ends to your iPhone. Its tab switcher is definitely faster than Safari’s, though the app as a whole can be a bit sluggish, and the screen grab feature, which lets you explore the page while still maintaining focus on a text field, is sometimes useful. It kinda reminds me of one of those old Internet Explorer tabbed shells from 2003: it’s mildly attractive for power users, but wouldn’t be necessary at all if Safari was just a little bit better. $0.99.


Pickin’ Stix
: A vintage vintage game, this app asks you to do precisely one thing. Doing that one thing is easy, and strangely gratifying. It feels like it ought to be free, but $0.99 isn’t so bad.

HDR Camera: No, you can’t take DSLR-grade, hyper-realistic dynamic range photos with your iPhone. You just can’t. That said, HDR Camera does do a convincing fake. The app coaxes some decent pseudo-HDR imagery out of the iPhone’s sad little camera, albeit with filters and effects you could easily just apply in Photoshop. Its $1.99 pricetag is too high.

UpNext 3D NYC: If your life revolves around NYC, there really isn’t a better way—wait, let me rephrase that: a prettier way—to navigate the city on your iPhone. If it doesn’t, UpNext 3D’s exquisitely detailed view of the city is still great eye candy. It does everything you could want from a mapping app: subway schedules, local listings and basic mapping functions and restaurant reviews. Tapping buildings even tells you what’s inside (but only sometimes). Sorry, Brooklynites, it’s Manhattan only for now. $2.99.

This Week’s App News on Giz:

Card Master Pro iPhone App Exposes Brian Lam’s Poor Gambling Skills

8Bitone Chiptunes Synthesizer App Lets You Mix It Like Mario

Kindle 1.1 for iPhone Now Available

New Slacker iPhone App Works Harder to Smack Pandora

iPrivus Brings Reverse Call Lookup App To The iPhone

This list is in no way definitive. If you’ve spotted a great app that hit the store this week, give us a heads up or, better yet, your firsthand impressions in the comments. And for even more apps: see our previous weekly roundups here, and check out our Favorite iPhone Apps Directory and our original iPhone App Review Marathon. Have a good weekend everybody.

Ciphone C6 video

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C6 game  –> <<SPORE>>



iphone and meizu M8 movie wallpaper

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iphone

meizu m8

Iphone game Resident Evil video

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iclooly-case

Beak-Like iPhone Stand is for the Birds

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iclooly-case

There’s certainly a need for a little, sturdy stand to prop up the iPhone whilst watching video, but we doubt that the iClooly is it, mostly because it adds too much bulk to the phone.

In “stand” mode, the iClooly works both vertically and horizontally, and the big clip curves down like a curlew’s beak to provide a secure, shake free “standing experience” (a marketing term we just invented). But in “teenage jeans pocket mode” it offers little more than a signal to pickpockets. “Here’s my iPhone” it calls, in the voice of the aforementioned curlew (it’s a piercing cry), “Please, steal me,” it wheedles, in a melancholic tone.

A missed opportunity, to be sure, and the company has clearly passed up the chance to make a protective case with a simple foldaway kick-stand and instead embraced the bird-spotting crowd. We can’t help but think that this might be a mistake, even in today’s market of niche products and “long-tails” (something the curlew doesn’t have). €25 ($33).

[wired]

212917-iphonemagnetometer2_300jpg

Next-Gen iPhone Will Contain a Compass

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212917-iphonemagnetometer2_300jpg

IPhone screenshots are easy enough to fake, and lord knows some odd claims come from the Boy Genius Report, but this seems such an obvious addition to iPhone hardware that we’ll bite.

The shot above is from a debugging menu inside the 3.0 beta iPhone OS, and shows options to save logs of a compass, as well as the current accelerometer and also “motion”, which we think is either a combo of the others or a log of the GPS unit’s findings. It makes complete sense. The iPhone hardware was mature at its first launch, and there’s not much — bar a decent camera and a thinner case — that could be added.

The G1 Googlephone already has a compass and it powers the neat but slow live street-view function, where the phone rather redundantly overlays pictures of the world onto the actual real world. Knowing the position of the phone and also the direction it is pointing in opens up some neat options.

This seems like a juicy and accurate rumor. In fact, now we have read it, it seems very odd that Apple wouldn’t include this in the new iPhone.

[wired]

3gsmart

Apple iPhone iSmart ,concept phone

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The iPhone get buttons
Features : 3.0″ 16M-color TFT display with a resolution of 352 x 416 pixels
Built-in GPS receiver
Wi-Fi
8 to 16GB of onboard storage
Accelerometer, proximity sensor and ambient light sensor
5 megapixel camera with auto focus and VGA video recording.
Push email with MS Exchange support
AppStore access for direct application download and installation
TV-out port
Java games

[via www.freeweb.hu]

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