I just got a snooze button! This free upgrade is found in Powernap 1.7 for the iOS. Thanks Tracey for the suggestion. http://bit.ly/hpa1qk
I just got a snooze button! This free upgrade is found in Powernap 1.7 for the iOS. Thanks Tracey for the suggestion. http://bit.ly/hpa1qkThu Apr 07 12:27:34 via webPowernap App
powernapapp
Recently, Apple posted, for the first time, app store submission guidelines. They are pretty specific, informative, and useful. Apple has been fairly opaque, in the past, regarding what would get your app rejected, so independent developers and producers, like myself, always lived at risk as to whether or not their new app idea would be summarily rejected. The new guidelines increase transparency and should help lower the Apple-related risks involved in creating new apps.
Ever since Apple introduced the App Store for their iPhone, there have been stories of apps being rejected. In the beginning, shunned developers would post their rejection letters on the Internet, and we would all commiserate and learn from each other’s experiences. Later, these rejection letters themselves were put under NDA, so the specific reasons for rejection became even murkier, and the fear factor rose. Some rejections clearly violated the developer terms and conditions, so there wasn’t much sympathy going around. Other rejections were genuinely surprising, and sometimes, even nuanced. These were scary. Every developer had to judge for themselves whether the time and money was going to be summarily flushed into the bit bucket. I noticed that my clients, even when developing innocuous apps, were concerned about the Apple risk.
So, to protect my apps and my clients, I have spent a fair amount of time over the last couple of years tracking the news sites, talking to fellow developers, and just generally keeping a finger on the pulse of the shifting rejections winds. I don’t think this will still be necessary…at least not to the same degree. For the first time, we have a document to read, and it is readable by actual humans, too. This frees up my time and lowers the risk of rejection. Largely now, I believe, rejected apps will be from software bugs, honest mistakes, and willful belligerence, but not random fate.
Some rules are funny:
This was a problem?
"The pilot just died - does anyone know how to land a plane?" - "They made an app for that, but it got rejected."
Apple is a funny company. They have a history, mostly pre-iPhone, of being slightly indifferent towards their development community. This reputation has carried over into the iPhone age, largely because of the overwhelming influx of new developers to the Mac platform. However, in my experience, it is largely undeserved. I see them making missteps, like when the original SDK was under a tight NDA gag-rule that forbade developers from talking to each other unless they worked in the same company, and the long lack of specific app submission guidelines. So far, though, they have always, even if very belatedly, addressed those missteps. The gag rule was lifted. The submission guidelines were eventually posted. This impresses me. Their reputation should be modified to: “Will do bonehead things to developers in the short run, but the right thing in the long run, and will always try to protect the end-user.” It could be worse. The company’s DNA seems good, which for Independent Developers and Producers, makes the iPhone and iPad good platforms to invest in.
Must reads for Independent App Producers:
* Apple App Submission Guidelines (Requires Developer Account)
* PR Press Release
* HI Guidelines
I’m quite interested in learning the impact of different distribution channels on the bottom line. Elegant Words was my first Web App and was a staff pick by Apple. Since it was listed in the Apple directory, I’ve been continually impressed by the number of users funneled through there versus organic discovery.
openappmkt.com is a new distribution channel for webapps on iPhone. 30 minutes to push Elegant Words as test. http://bit.ly/ewOnOpenAppMktThu Aug 19 14:11:24 via webJ.J. Rohrer
jjrohrer
We’ll see what happens here. The screen shots below got a little messed up, not sure why.
Oh, I need to add another 15 mins for this write up.
The iPhone 4 comes out on Thursday, and a few lucky folks have already gotten theirs. As a developer, I’ve been using the upgraded iOS4 operating system for a few weeks now (but I’m still waiting for my iPhone 4 to ship) and Apple is now allowing official reviews. So here is the only thing you need to know. The most useful feature of the new operating system is the addition of Folders. This is the one features that has impacted my day-to-day usage the most.
Now, I know everyone is excited about multi-tasking, which is cool. I added it to PowerNap and Nightlight, and am working on Time-to-Read, Meeting Timer, and Time-to-Eat, since they all have timers in them. I’m just added the first round of Retina-display graphics to Wallet Zero and added iAds to start recuperating some of my investment in that app. But, these features in my apps, and others, are not really that big of deal, compared to Folders. Those other features are simply nice improvements, but Folders have dramatically improved my daily iPhone experience.
Folders do a great job of letting me get to my apps and data faster. I can now put every app I need on the first three pages, making most of them about two away, or, at most, two taps and two swipes. That isn’t bad. Since I group apps by activity, like news sites that I read regularly, then they are typically only one tap away as I switch from one app in the group onto the next app. It is good enough that I now prefer reading on my iPhone over reading on my iPad, simply because my iPad is tending to get a little cluttered.
Folders also makes it way easier to share my phone with kids. My seven year old son hoards games, which tends to scatter icons over several screens, but I can now tell him, “These last three screens are yours, the rest are mine,” and have it work out fairly well.
So, what does this mean for the independent application publisher? This brings into focus the concept of app refinement. For apps, the devil is in the details, and little refinements that impact workflow create a big payoff in user experience. From a technology perspective, folders just are not that big of a deal, but it makes everyday tasks, like finding my app, more pleasant, more refined. Your app might have the coolest technology in the world, but those ‘hard-to-do’ things are not necessarily the most important. So pay attention to how people use your app and focus on adding refinements that improve their user experience. Sometimes the biggest payoffs are the easiest to do.
According to Gizmodo, this is Apple’s next iPhone, importantly, to me, with a screen of 640×960. There has been a lot of kvetching around the Internet about the iPhone’s new case, it’s front facing camera, etc. but I think that people are missing the cooler picture here. Since the iPad’s resolution is 768×1024, and that the original iPhone’s screen is at 320×480, then we can only draw one logical conclusion: Apple hates apps.
Yup – I said it. There is no taking it back. I dare you to disagree. Well, at least some apps. The bad apps. The unloved apps.
One of the iPhone’s, and iPod touch’s early competitive advantages against the Android, Palm, Nokia, and Blackberry was it’s consistent development target. As a developer, a typical app that I built for the iPod touch would work just fine for the all of the iPhone platforms because they had the same input, same screen resolution, etc. If it worked on an iPod touch, then I really didn’t need to test it on, say, an iPhone 3G. Unlike, say, the Blackberry line, with several different resolutions, orientations, and input methodologies, developing for one model meant very little chance of it working on the other models. My early Blackberry development was a bit of nightmare. I screamed at Palm when, after making a game for them targeted at 320×480 on the Palm Pre, when they started shipping the Palm Pixi with resolution of 320×400. What kind of sadist company would do that to their developers? Don’t get my started on what it is like to test for a Nokia app. That fragmentation made it quite difficult to develop for them. The recent spat of resolution changes for the iPhone line, though, changes that Apple advantage (but don’t worry about Apple just yet).
Why would Apple do this? Well, partly, of course, is that they sorted of needed to get higher resolution screens for the iPad. But for the iPhones, those little screens are good enough, and Apple has never been known for introducing technology with out a corresponding and compelling uptick for the user’s experience. I think this is part of their strategy for culling their massive app catalog of the crappy apps. I don’t think you can underestimate how many of the apps in the app store basically don’t make any money. Stories abound about the app producer that spent $30,000 in development but only harvested $1,000 from the app store. There are countless more, and I know from first and second hand experience, of apps that, although costing less to develop, are only earning $100 in revenue over the life of the app. So, arguably, most, but not all, of the apps, just suck. Those developers will simply not re-invest the time and money to port them to the iPad or the higher-resolution iPhones.
This is win-win for Apple and the consumers. Apple still gets to rightly claim an un-godly number of apps in their catalog, but as the newer devices come online, those consumers will only normally see the apps designed for their device. As a new iPad owner, I really felt compelled to remove every iPhone app, except for the one or two that didn’t have an iPad equivalent and were actually important to my daily workflow.
My recent apps that I upgraded for to the iPad, Nightlight and Powernap: Forty winks anywhere meant some significant re-thinking of the app. I couldn’t just rely upon iPhone emulation mode – things didn’t look good without re-designing. Redesigning for a different screen is a big deal. The investment is significant. The looming changes in screen resolutions out of Apple is also having me revamp my whole programming workflow – something difficult for less sophisticate programmers and developers shops to pull off. Developing for the iPhone OS line just became a lot tougher.
What Apple could have done to make me think different? While in emulation mode, when zoomed in at 2x, I would have expected to see the fonts, for example, re-scaled. Imagine when you zoom-in in Safari, the text still looks awesome. Not the case for iPhone apps on the iPad. Graphic images also could also have been resampled/interpolated, like when you plop a DVD into a player attached to your fancy HD TV. Those DVDs, without extra processing, look pretty crummy. That crummy image was, originally, a big marketing angle for Blue-Ray purchases. But with good processing, a DVD actually looks pretty decent on an HD TV. Apple is a smart company – they could have done that, too, if they thought it important enough – they just didn’t.
This is all pretty good stuff. Apple wins. Consumers win. And, I think, independent developers will win because of fewer get-rich-quick developers out there trying to win the app lottery, undermining the economics. I, for one, welcome our new varying resolution Apple overlords.
This little app solves quadratic equations for you. Really. That’s it. It works. It is pretty.
I picked 365 words for you from a list of real words looked up by real people. The words come from my own dictionary history, from users of ElegantWords, and from suggestions by my friends. Definitions come from the across the Internet and from the my server’s Wordnet dictionary, ensuring you get a broad and modern range of definitions, usages, and contexts. See synonyms, usage samples, and original sources. This uses the same rich definition engine used by ElegantWords.
iPhone screenshot
iPhone screenshot: Word Details
iPhone screenshot: Wikipedia(tm) entry (if applicable)
This little app solves simple math problems for you, like 2 + 3, or, if you feel daring, 2 + 3 * (4+2 -8/2). Really. That’s it. It works. It is pretty.
iPhone screenshot
iPhone screenshot
iPhone screenshot
iPad screenshot
iPad screenshot
iPad screenshot
This is not your father’s dictionary. Words come from the across the Internet and the server’s dictionary, ensuring you get a broad and modern range of definitions, usages, and contexts. See synonyms, usage samples, and original sources.
Perfect for when you are reading a book – never skip a word just because your paper dictionary is too far away or because your computer-based dictionary would mean too much of an interruption from your main task – reading. Keep it handy while reading in bed, on the bus, on the couch, but not in the tub.
Some Reviews
==========
“This is much more practical and functional than the other dictionary apps”
“The pairing of the word definition with other online references like Wikipedia is a nice touch.”
Unique Features
– See word popularity. Hint: “Ubiquitous” is #1
– See how many times a word has been looked up by other people.
– Get your definitions from multiple sources, including Wikipedia.
– Touch the word’s source to visit the web site that originally defined the word, such as that word’s Wikipedia page.
– See how many times you have already looked up a given word.
iPhone screenshot: Looking up 'elegant'
iPhone screenshot: the many definitions of 'fear'
iPhone screenshot: one definition of 'fear'
iPhone screenshot: another definition of 'fear'
iPhone screenshot: The Wikipedia(R) entry (if applicable)
Mark your daily reading times with just one tap on this reading timer. You can mark your time as your read. Perfect for daily reading goals that new readers often have in school. This combines empowering your children, like other mark-your-time devices, with the convenience and cool-factor of an iPhone or iPod touch.
For fun: see your lifetime total!
Features:
* Pick your goal
* Big buttons for little fingers
* 3 ways to alarm: Sound (when available), Vibration (when available), and Visual.
* Show when this session started
* Show total elapsed time
* Show time remaining
* Remembers where you left off when returning to the program
* Allows your to keep reading even after meeting your goal to show extra reading
* Big visual marker when meeting your goal for easy display to guardian
* Lots of support options
iPhone screenshot
iPhone screenshot
iPhone screenshot
iPhone screenshot
What is this?
Elegant Torch was built to live next to your bed. You’ll find a booklight, a nightlight, and a timer for taking short naps. Great for both everyday use and when sleeping in unfamiliar rooms.
Yah, but why?
I tend to read in bed. Shortly after buying my seemingly all-powerful iPhone, the batteries in my traditional book light ran out. I was left in the dark. I tried to use a free flashlight app on the iPhone as a substitute book light. It worked almost well enough, except that it kept going into “Sleep” mode, leaving me in the dark. I developed Elegant Torch to be my new bedtime reading buddy.
Book Light
The Book Light simply turns your device into a book light (aka: flashlight, torch, nightlight, reading light etc.) and there’s also a timer so can see how long you’ve been reading. This is pretty much a bright white screen. It is simple and stable. That’s it. Little else. It’s meant for people who read books with a book light. If I turn up the brightness all the way on the device, then the light is slightly brighter than a typical small book light, but not as bright as the larger book lights. I find it particularly useful as a back-up book light. Nice if batteries in your primary book light run down or if traveling without a book light. It also makes a great emergency flashlight (which is surprisingly useful).
Timed Nightlight
The Timed Nightlight dims after a preset number of minutes. You can change its brightness and color. It can be used, for example, when you are at a hotel, or if your light switches are far away from the bed. It can also be used as a little bedside reminder. I often lose track of time when I’m reading a good book in bed. I sometimes look up and see, to my horror, that 3 hours have just slipped by, destroying any chance of a full night’s rest. Starting the Timed Nightlight will give you a clear but quiet indication that it might be time to go to sleep.
Power Nap
The Power Nap is designed to wake you up from a short sleep. It’s the alarm clock for people too busy for alarm clocks. Say you have 30 minutes before your next class or before your next plane. You would love to catch a few winks, but you don’t want to go through the hassle and risk of setting up a traditional alarm clock. The Power Nap has just two controls. The first control sets the time from 1 to 60 minutes, so there is no risk of getting your AM & PMs mixed up. The second control lets you perform a sound check to ease your anxiety that your device might be muted. The timer visually counts down the time remaining for extra feedback and peace of mind.
I designed TimeToEat to help bring a little calmness to the kitchen. When I cook big meals, I’m typically tracking a several things at once, like the sauce on the stove, the sauce next to it, the dessert in the oven, and the wine chilling in the freezer that I forgot to start chilling properly earlier in the day. TimeToEat has four distinct countdown timers, plus a summary screen to track each one.
Unique Feature
==============
* Four countdown times in one application.
* Each timer has its own screen.
* A front page gives summary information.
* Navigate to each timer by either tapping the dots at the top, by swiping, or by the right-arrow on the front page.
* Enter a note for each timer, like “Sauce” or “Rice.” This note is also shown on the front page.
* Easy Start, Pause, & Restart, even on the summary page.
* Keep track of when you started a timer.
* Keep track of elapsed time, even if you paused the timer.
* Displays the Completion Time to quickly help you plan other prep times.
* A “Test Your Alarm Button” on every page to help avoid the otherwise real risk of not hearing an alarm on accidentally muted device.
Everyone knows that time is money. And everyone knows that meetings can be a total waste of time. As such, meetings can waste a lot of money. But just just how much? Download this app to find out.
Here’s how it works: Start the app at the beginning of a meeting. Spend a few of those pointless minutes guessing the Hourly Cost Per Attendee. Enter how many people are in the meeting. Then watch the running total grow as the seconds tick by. Instead of doodling on your note pad, you’ll be able to watch your product’s price increase and your bonus pool decrease.
Every meeting you attend will be added to your Lifetime Total, so instead of analysing your colleague’s new facial hair, you’ll be able to think about what you really could have done with those wasted hours. Perhaps you could have improved your own productivity, learned Mandarin, or built a house from scratch.
And every meeting added by every Meeting Timer user will go into a World Wide Loss Total, so instead of resenting about yet another meeting, you can solve the current global financial crisis.
Just don’t show this to your boss, because he or she will probably stop calling pointless meetings. And then you’d have to work!
iPhone screenshot
iPhone screenshot
iPhone screenshot: Changing average charge
iPhone screenshot: for British Pound locale
iPhone screenshot: for Euro locale
A simple but effective nightlight that automatically shuts down when its time to sleep. Perfect for when visiting a strange hotel and need a little light before getting into bed. It is elegant.
Features
==============
* Device stays awake while counting down, then powers down after specified duration.
* One-Touch timer start.
* Set timer for up to one hour.
* Set brightness.
* Set custom colors.
* Works in landscape mode
Happy sleeping,
iPhone screenshot
iPhone screenshot: a different background
iPhone screenshot
iPhone screenshot
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iPhone screenshot
iPad screenshot
iPad screenshot
iPad screenshot
I designed the PowerNap alarm clock specifically to let you take short naps away from home. In the library, for example, I don’t want to bother my fellow readers by needlessly setting off an alarm when a simple vibration may have been adequate, so PowerNap vibrates for 25 seconds before sounding an audible alarm. While waiting in the VIP lounge at the airport, you don’t want to accidently have the wrong AM or PM setting, so PowerNap limits your times from between one and 60 minutes. Lastly, you don’t want to miss the alarm because of a muted phone, so PowerNap provides a “Test Alarm” button for testing volume. It’s great while waiting for class, while waiting for a plane, or while just resting your eyes before the next big thing. PowerNap lets you catch 40 winks anywhere.
Get some rest,
JJ
Try it Now! Seriously – this works (no sound).
iPhone screenshot: Showing the silent option
iPhone screenshot: Mid Nap
iPhone screenshot: some backgrounds
iPad screenshot
iPad screenshot: Picking images on the iPad
iPad screenshot: Rain background (my backyard)
iPad screenshot: Settings
Tired of clunky plastic tags on your key chains? Sick of digging through hoards of plastic cards in your wallet? So were we.
WalletZero is designed to organize and store your favorite membership or loyalty information on your iPhone – neatly arranged and just a touch away.
To get started, select your program and enter in your barcode number. A scan-worthy barcode will be reproduced and stored on your iPhone for easy use again and again. No barcode? We also store major airlines and hotel membership info – so you can keep it all in one spot.
In the News & Blogosphere: Infinite Wallet Space for Loyalty Cards
Roadmap
One of the most needed features is the ability to create a custom card and barcode for stores not in the list. Although there are some provisions for that today, richer, more robust wizard would be useful. I’m starting to explore options and might use some barcode generating software from Softmatic to supplement the existing server based system. The Softmatic software is linkware, so, here we go: Barcode Software provided by Softmatic
iPhone screenshot
iPhone screenshot
iPhone screenshot
iPhone screenshot
iPhone screenshot