The Week in iPhone Apps: Essential Jailbreak Apps

Apple just today declared jailbreaking illegal. So, in outlaw style, it’s a good day to take a break from the App Store to peruse the naughty treasures available to jailbreakers via Cydia.

As you’re well aware by now, Apple’s official SDK limits apps from doing lots of things, like cut and paste, video capture, and dubiously legal things like NES emulation. All of the apps listed here do something Apple doesn’t approve of, and they can be found by searching Cydia, an installer that automatically appears on your iPhone once you’ve successfully complete jailbreaking your phone. We’re not going to run through that process here (Quickpwn and Pwnage Tool are your friends), but suffice it to say, Apple doesn’t condone the practice, and there are certain risks to messing up your iPhone when you jailbreak or install any unauthorized apps. Be forewarned. Here’s what we’ve safely tested:

WinterBoard – The essential change-my-appearance app for the iPhone since the days before the App Store, it’s been known by other seasons before (SummerBoard, for example), but it’s essentially the same: You download themes, and can use this app to apply them system-wide. It also gives you other appearance controls like “Dim Wallpaper” and “Solid Status Bar.”

BossPrefs – An insanely useful utility for making one-tap system adjustments like toggling 3G, EDGE, wi-fi or Bluetooth. You can turn your mail on and off fast too. I like the “Hide Icons” feature, where you can go in and take certain apps off of your home screens without taking them entirely off your iPhone.

Search – An amazing app for searching everything on your iPhone, including MAIL! It’s a lot like the Sherlock of old—type a search term, hit enter, and it starts digging through Contacts, SMS, Notes, Events, Safari Bookmarks and Safari History. Tap any search result, and you go straight to that app. (We also tried Searcher, which does all of the above but does not search mail).

Cycorder – The semi-answer to iPhone’s lack of video recording, Cycorder does motion JPEG recording (now with audio). It looks as good as you can expect with that camera. The only catch is, in order to pull video files off of the damn phone, you have to use SSH or something else that can access the file structure. Nobody said bootleg app use was a cakewalk.

Snapture – An example of a for-profit jailbreak app, Snapture gives you basic controls for free for 20 tries, but then asks for $8, and in return gives you access to albums and all sorts of stuff. It’s risky considering any jailbroken app may not work the next time you update your iPhone’s software, but in this case, it’s at least a well designed app, giving you lots of camera controls (timers, auto-rotation, color mode, an on-screen level) plus a shutter button that is the entire screen, so it’s easier to take pictures with one semi-steady hand.

xGPS – This GPS program made a name for itself the other day by saying that, by February 20, it would have turn-by-turn speech navigation. While you wait for that, you can check out the nominal version available now, which is mostly just Google Maps with some extra tools like GPS tracking.

Clippy – Copy and paste really do work on an iPhone, and it’s system-wide. However, there are limitations. Once you’ve installed this utility from Cydia, you get to it by going to the number keys on the pop-up keyboard. As you can see, it appears above the standard numbers. As you might guess from that, you can only copy or paste when you have access to the keyboard. So copying an address off of a website is not doable, even though you would be able to paste any address into maps once you had it. There are new features that just popped up which I haven’t explored yet—maybe you know about them.

NES.app – An NES emulator that keeps getting better. If you can handle the touch controls, it’ll handle most of your ROMs at near full speed. And this is certainly something you won’t find in the App Store at any time in the future.

There are a lot of multimedia apps, like TuneWiki, which gives you lyrics to your iTunes songs, Shuffle, which does Pandora-like smart shuffling of your library based on what you like and don’t like, and MxTube, which lets you save YouTube videos. While those are all nifty, they’re not as essential as the ones above. If you feel that we’ve missed something really truly essential, then by all means let us know. As usual, with so many iPhone apps out there, this is in no way a complete listing.

Oh, and as for that iPhone Modem icon in the image you may have noticed? It’s the only way you can tether your iPhone, and we’ll have even more on that in tomorrow’s Saturday How-To. Check it!

This Week’s App News On Giz:

The 25 Best iPhone Apps For Outdoor Adventurers

WhatTheFont For iPhone IDs Fonts From Text in Snapped Photos

Turn-By-Turn Voice Navigation Comes to Jailbroken iPhones

31 Fart Apps In 90 Seconds

ServersMan App Turns the iPhone Into an All-Out Web Server

For even more app coverage: 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.

Android Market getting paid apps this week?

According to a passing mention in the Wall Street Journal, the Android Market could start accepting for-pay apps as early as this week. We’ve been expecting such a development to hit this quarter, and it makes sense with that RC33 update in the bag. Unfortunately, this WSJ quote — pulled a piece on Microsoft’s mobile strategy — is all we’ve got to go on at the moment. Either way, paid apps are obviously an inevitability, and that financial incentive could be a major boost to the Android ecosystem… or the harbinger or farting apps.

[Via Talk Android]

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Android Market getting paid apps this week? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Feb 2009 13:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nokia launching a Symbian app store at MWC?

Because you’re not cool unless you’ve got an app store, Nokia is reportedly set to join the ranks of Apple, Palm, BlackBerry, Samsung, and pretty much everyone in opening a software portal for its Symbian OS. According to Mobile-Review editor Eldar Murtazin, the Finnish phone maker’s already got it running and is testing behind-the-scenes, with a formal announcement to come at the Mobile World Congress. While we’ll have to wait until Barcelona to find out with some degree of certainty, at this point we’d be more surprised to see a company not open up an online app shop.

[Via Unwired View]

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Nokia launching a Symbian app store at MWC? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 07 Feb 2009 23:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Week in iPhone Apps: A Good Week For Cheapskate Gamers

The App Store follows trends more closely than your 13-year-old sister at Hot Topic, and often, that’s a bad thing. But this week has revealed a trend I think you’re going to like.

Rolando Lite: While charging full price for what should arguably be a free upgrade is one App Store trend we’d like to see die (see below), here’s one that’s great: lite versions of the most popular non-free games. Rolando is fantastic if you haven’t played it yet, and now you can try before you buy with the free Lite, which is limited to the first stage only. Free.

Super Monkey Ball Lite: And what ho? A free lite version of Monkey Ball too with three stages from the full game? Keep it up game publishers, keep it up.

X-Plane Extreme: It’s kind of annoying how X-Plane keeps packaging new planes into all-new editions of the app, charging 10 bucks for each one, but X-Plane Extreme does look pretty great. This one’s bringing the military jets, from the F-22 Raptor, B-2 Stealth Bomber and the ol’ SR-71 Blackbird spy plane, and they look beautiful. If you haven’t bought X-Plane already and dig flight sims, Extreme looks like the version to get (there is also one for Airliners and Helicopters, if that’s your thing).

Light Bike Full Version: On sale for a buck for a limited time only, this is the just-released full version of Pankaku’s Tron game with the awesome two-hands-one-iPhone four-player mode we liked so much when we first saw it. Very cool. $1

Digital Bass Line: I’ve been wanting to play with Korg’s awesome DS-10 synth software for the DS for quite some time, but until I get my hands on it, this great Roland TB-303 emulator will tide me over. The 303 is the bass synth companion to the legendary 808 drum machine, and it’s reproduced quite faithfully here-really fun to play around with, even if you’re not a musician. It’s $5.

Almond Emulator: And finally, do you ever get the sense you’re watching someone lose their mind via disconnected clues? Like, say, the iPhone apps they write? The Almond Emulator costs $1, and offers the chance to taste, smell, feel and listen to a digital on-screen almond; each button pressed simply changes the text above to read “It tastes just like an almond.” Riiiiight. Probably the strangest app I’ve seen-kick this guy a buck, he needs it to refill his meds.

This Week’s iPhone App News on Giz:

Where’s My Menupages iPhone App?

Inside the Mind of the Man Who Gave Us iFart Mobile

LCD Clock iPhone App Makes Your Real Clock Seem Pitiful and Sad

Watch and Listen To The Geniuses of This Week’s TED Conference On Your iPhone

How To Text With Adorable Japanese Emoji On Your iPhone For a Buck

How To Text With Adorable Japanese Emoji On Your iPhone For a Buck

Rumor: iPhone 3.0 Might Let Apps Run in the Background for Real Multitasking

ClearCam for iPhone Stitches 2MP Photos Together Into 4MP Ones

How to Find Awesome iPhone Apps (no place better than the Week in iPhone Apps, though, obviously)

Crackulous Allows for App Store Piracy

Internet Visionary MC Hammer Releases Eagerly-Anticipated “HammerTime” iPhone App

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.

Nine-year old writes iPhone app, hates vegetables

We’ve seen plenty of remarkable kids — the world is just bursting with them — and Lim Ding Wen, a nine-year-old from Singapore is no exception. Like his father, Wen enjoys writing iPhone apps in his spare time. His application, called Doodle Kids, is a drawing application for children that he wrote for his two younger sisters, who enjoy drawing, and it’s already been downloaded over 4,000 times (we just checked in the App Store and it does indeed appear to be quite popular) since its release on February 1st. Wen, who is fluent in six programming languages and enjoys reading books about — you guessed it — computer programming, is already hard at work on his next app, a game called “Invader Wars.” We can’t wait to see that one!

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Nine-year old writes iPhone app, hates vegetables originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Feb 2009 11:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Smartphone videogame market explodes in 2008; dumbphone market wounded, but struggling on

Smartphone videogame market explodes in 2008; dumbphone market wounded, but struggling on

With the economy lodged so firmly in the toilet we’re always glad to see some sort of good news on that front, so check out the latest numbers from comScore that show the market for downloadable time-wasters on smartphones grew by a massive 291 percent in the period between November of 2007 and 2008. That’s thanks in large part to the iPhone and its App Store, with sales on that platform alone accounting for 14 percent of all mobile game downloads and nearly one third of all iPhone users reporting they’d downloaded at least one game. That compares quite favorably to non-smartphone users, of whom just 3.8 percent have downloaded a game, driving that market to decline by 14 percent since 2007. Overall the mobile gaming industry bucked recessionary trends, grew a healthy 17 percent, and will now be shopping in the husky clothing section.

[Via PHONE Magazine]

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Smartphone videogame market explodes in 2008; dumbphone market wounded, but struggling on originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Feb 2009 03:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Crackulous released, promises to bust iPhone app protection scheme

If Apple’s sat back and let the iPhone hacking community do its thing in peace (well, relative peace) so far, this little gem just might be what the doctor ordered to stir up the crap. Crackulous — available now in beta form through Cydia — claims to be able to strip the protection off most apps downloaded from the App Store, meaning that just a single user needs to take the plunge and buy a target app once to get it busted and into free circulation. You need a jailbroken iPhone to get Crackulous loaded, naturally — you’ll see Apple make a Windows Mobile-powered device before you’ll see Crackulous in the App Store — but seeing how PwnageTool is dead simple to use, this puts most users just a couple graphical tools away from foolproof piracy and the golden opportunity to take a few hard-earned bucks out of a programmer’s pocket.

[Via Funky Space Monkey]

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Crackulous released, promises to bust iPhone app protection scheme originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Feb 2009 01:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Week in iPhone Apps: Place Your Bets

This Sunday, your phone can help you gamble. It can also let you become a carjacker for one brief moment, and bring you closer to the lovely Ben Gibbard. To the Store.

Payback: It’s no Chinatown Wars, but Payback is a solid GTA-clone for the iPhone. Lots of guns, lots of driving, and really, really solid graphically. I prefer my iPhone games more on the play-for-2-minutes puzzle side, but Payback has a neat auto-save feature that lets you pick up right where you left off once your sandwich is ready and it’s time to stop playing.

Office Pool: This guy kind of priced himself out of the market, since, well, a paper and pencil works pretty well for this too, but if you want to create and track your illegal box pool on your iPhone, $5 will do that for you.

Death Cab For Cutie: Surprise iPhone-loving Trent Reznor didn’t beat those emo weenies Death Cab For Cutie to the iPhone app game, but this is still pretty cool. The free app links you up to ten free streaming songs, news, tour dates, videos, and of course the chance to buy stuff. Pretty nice design. If you still heart Ben Gibbard’s dulcet honeyvoice, this is for you. Free.

Fullbrowser: One of the more interesting new browsers now that developers can re-skin Safari is Fullscreen, which removes the title bar for normal browsing and overlays a nice translucent bar when you need it. And, it’s free.

This Week’s App New On Giz:

iPhone 2.2.1 Update Available Now, Fixes Bugs

iPhone 2.2.1 Pwnage Jailbreak Is Here

Air Photo Adds Wi-Fi Printing to the iPhone

114 Apps Apple Won’t Be Approving for the App Store Anytime Soon (Photoshop contest – beautiful stuff here).

$999.99 iPhone App MyCentrl Hooks You Up With Other Dumb Rich People

Face Double iPhone App Tells You Who Your Celebrity Twin Is

Apple Can’t Stand the Sight of Boobs or Booty

Sirius Satellite Radio iPhone App Could Come Within a Week

Dollar Origami iPhone App Instructs How to Properly Fold a Bill

Rowmote Brings Apple’s Front Row Remote to the iPhone (Unofficially)

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 original iPhone App Review Marathon. Have a good weekend everybody.

114 Apps Apple Won’t Be Approving for the App Store Anytime Soon

For this week’s Photoshop Contest, I asked for some iPhone apps that would never survive the approval process. Warning: some of these are NSFW, more are just in poor taste. Hey, I’m just the messenger!

First Place — Peter Telesco
Second Place — El Guapo
Third Place — Jesse Armstrong

Apple throws another curveball, approves Podcaster for the App Store with changes

Apple had already solidly cemented its reputation as the confused, identity crisis-stricken, moral dilemma-having lord ruler of the App Store with its recent approval of a number of browsers that would seemingly violate its “duplication of functionality” policy, but now it’s doing some serious soul-searching with this latest move. Remember Podcaster? The on-the-go podcast downloader predated Apple’s own mobile download capability by months — but Cupertino struck the thing down for encroaching on iTunes’ territory, seemingly dooming it to a life of ad hoc installs and jailbreaks. It’s just been given a fresh lease on life, though, emerging as “RSS Player” and killing off Podcaster’s built-in directory of casts; Apple’s suddenly cool with the revised app, giving it two thumbs-up on the way to the App Store, but it’s not clear if the directory functionality was the problem, there’s a policy change in play here, or the name change simply fooled the App Store admins into giving the green light. At any rate, in case you’re wondering why you’d shell out $1.99 for the pleasure of this “duplication of functionality,” RSS Player will let you blow by iTunes’ 10MB limit — and, of course, you can download any feed you like. Thanks, Apple. [Warning: iTunes link]

[Via UNEASYsilence]

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Apple throws another curveball, approves Podcaster for the App Store with changes originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 26 Jan 2009 21:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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