New York City Intros Android, iPhone Condom App

nyc condom app.jpg

According to a recent study, your smartphone doesn’t make you quite as sexy as you might think. That said, if you are managing to get some, in spite of the overwhelming odds, as Steve Jobs would tell you, you’ll really get a better reception if you get a rubber bumper.

The New York City Health Department is celebrating Valentine’s week with the release of its New York City Condom Finder, a free app that will locate the five spots nearest to your location that offer up free jimmy hats (within the five boroughs).

Says NYC’s assistant health commissioner, Dr. Minoca Sweeney, “We want New York City to be the safest city in the world to have sex. A lot of people come here for that, so we want them to practice safer sex.”

The app is available now for the iPhone and Android.

IntoNow for iPhone [Video]

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Warner packages movies as iOS apps, starting with The Dark Knight and Inception

Online rentals and purchases of movies are still just a tiny fraction of the home video pie, but Warner’s latest effort to expand that is similar to Paramount’s recent efforts on Windows Phone 7 (Thanks SteveyAyo), offering its highest profile flicks as apps for iPhones and iPads. The Dark Knight and Inception are the first two releases out of the gate, offering free apps with some bonus content and the first five minutes of the movie, then charging $9.99 and $11.99, respectively to unlock the rest. According to Warner, it offers a different experience than simply purchasing the flick over iTunes because of the extras which include Twitter and Facebook integration among the extras, plus the ability to offer the digital version in countries where iTunes doesn’t sell movies yet, like China, Brazil and the Netherlands. There’s a video demo and press release after the break, but the downside of being locked to portable devices is keeping us from clicking the buy button for now, but if you could sprinkle some Ultraviolet on it, we might change our tune.

Continue reading Warner packages movies as iOS apps, starting with The Dark Knight and Inception

Warner packages movies as iOS apps, starting with The Dark Knight and Inception originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Feb 2011 18:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Capcom denies rift with Apple over Smurfs’ Village in-app purchases

Did Apple take Capcom to task over the in-app purchase fiasco in the company’s Smurfs’ Village game for iOS? That was the rumor going around earlier today, after Pocket Gamer reported that it had heard from a “well placed source” who said that Apple had some “strong words” for the game maker. Capcom has now come out and denied any such rift, however, saying in a statement that “we are in frequent communication with Apple, and at no point have they expressed any displeasure to any representatives of Capcom Mobile in regards to our handling of in-app purchases within Smurfs’ Village.” Interestingly, Pocket Gamer’s original report also claimed that Apple was considering a change to its current 15 minute password window to reduce inadvertent in-app purchases, and Capcom says that it would welcome such a move — although it’s not aware of any impending change.

Capcom denies rift with Apple over Smurfs’ Village in-app purchases originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Feb 2011 17:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourcePocket Gamer (1), (2)  | Email this | Comments

The stylus isn’t dead: more pen-based tablets and apps coming this year

HTC may have unleashed a completely unique Android tablet with an active digitizer and stylus yesterday, but more are on the way. At least that’s the word from N-Trig, the company responsible for the screen and pen technology in HTC’s Flyer as well as other convertible tablet PCs. According to the company’s VP of Business Development Lenny Englehardt, 7-, 9.7-, and 10-inch pen-equipped Android slates are coming in the next year from major manufacturers (sadly, he couldn’t share which ones). We went over a bit of the hardware technology yesterday and dug a bit into HTC’s pen-optimized Scribe software, but the big question on our mind has been third party Android applications that take advantage of the stylus. Well, it turns out there are quite a few of them in the works from the likes of Adobe and others. And yes, one of them includes handwriting conversion! We got a look at three of those forthcoming apps on N-Trig’s Tegra 2 development kit, which has the same screen / pen hardware as the Flyer — hit the break for our impressions and a video demo.

Continue reading The stylus isn’t dead: more pen-based tablets and apps coming this year

The stylus isn’t dead: more pen-based tablets and apps coming this year originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Feb 2011 08:33:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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RIM adding BBM app gifting to BlackBerry App World

So you’ve got this hot new “super app” off BlackBerry App World, and want to share it with a friend? You could message them the name of the program, but that’s so 2010. Soon, BlackBerry’s going to have its very own “Gift This App” functionality through BBM, which will let you take advantage of that handy new carrier billing to debit the cost of the item and wing it to your recipient. RIM envisions the functionality used by parents who want to limit their children’s access too, by taking full control of their purchases and subscriptions from their own remote handset. Now, we’ll just sit back, relax and wait for RIM to ping us with a release date. PR after the break.

Continue reading RIM adding BBM app gifting to BlackBerry App World

RIM adding BBM app gifting to BlackBerry App World originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Feb 2011 04:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sleep as an Droid for Android [AppOfTheDay]

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HP revamping webOS App Catalog for tablet use, adding carrier billing and magazine-like view

If HP wants webOS to be a competitive mobile ecosystem, the platform’s app store has an awful lot of catching up to do — but in terms of raw features, it sounds like the company plans to get with the program soon. PreCentral attended a developer presentation at MWC 2011 where HP showed off a brand new version of the App Catalog specifically designed for the tablet-friendly webOS 3.0, and found it will come with a handful of features that should make it eminently more useful. As you can see in the image above, there are presently four tabs, but two of them are worth calling out: the “Browser” is said to be a magazine-like interface for browsing through apps, while the “Saved” tab lets you bookmark apps you’re interested in to consider for purchase or download later on. Perhaps more importantly, the process of actually paying for programs should be streamlined quite soon: HP told attendees that carrier billing and promo codes would find their way into the webOS App Catalog by summer at the very latest, in time for a webOS 3.0 launch, which suggests that it could possibly hit smartphones even a mite sooner.

HP revamping webOS App Catalog for tablet use, adding carrier billing and magazine-like view originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 15 Feb 2011 20:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft-Nokia Hookup Leaves Symbian Devs Hanging

When Nokia teamed up with Microsoft to compete with smartphone rivals Apple and Google, the company was putting something valuable at risk: the loyalty of the programmers who create apps for the Nokia ecosystem.

After the companies announced their partnership last week, many die-hard Nokia programmers posted comments in forums and blog posts, expressing feelings of betrayal while threatening to code for Android instead.

“Developers are outraged because they feel that Nokia has betrayed them and sold them out to Microsoft,” said Andres Kruse, a programmer who makes apps with the Qt toolkit that will not be supported on Nokia’s Windows phones.

Developers have been a crucial resource for every major technology company’s media ecosystem. Programmers’ apps ultimately determine what a company’s product can do, and compelling apps can serve as a major attractor for consumer sales. Apple, Google, Nokia and Microsoft have aggressively recruited developers to make apps for their platforms as if they’re soldiers going to war.

Many consider Nokia’s Symbian operating system to be outdated compared to Apple’s iOS and Google’s Android, but the Finnish phone company has cultivated a development community for over a decade. One of the most popular programming toolkits developed by Nokia is Qt (pronounced cute), an open source application framework that can create software that works on multiple platforms.

Microsoft and Nokia last week cut a deal, in which Nokia would adopt Windows Phone 7 as its primary mobile operating system. The agreement reportedly cost Microsoft billions of dollars.

One major side effect involved in the Nokia-Microsoft partnership is that going forward, Qt will not be supported on Nokia’s Windows phones. Nokia will continue to sell Symbian phones supporting Qt over the next two years, and Nokia claims it will continue to develop Qt, but eventually the company will transition to Windows Phone 7 as its primary OS.

“By shifting our future smartphone strategy away from Qt there is a strong sense of frustration from those who have invested in Qt for mobile development,” Nokia’s Aron Kozak said in a blog post. “We sympathize and we understand…. There is no magical statement we can make that proves things will be great, however we will try to maintain open communication as we progress.”

However, Kruse said he felt pressured to decide whether to recreate apps for Windows Phone 7, or to take an entirely new route such as Android.

“This is a company where it feels like they’ve been doing everything for them and now their company is capitulating,” said Gartner analyst Michael Gartenberg, regarding Nokia developers who reacted negatively to the Microsoft partnership. “You can imagine that if Steve Jobs came back to Apple in 1997, if he said ‘We’re done with Macintosh, we’re just going to build Windows PCs,’ you would’ve seen the same reaction in the Apple community.”

Brian Watson, Microsoft’s director of developer evangelism for Windows Phone 7, explained that Nokia and Microsoft opted against supporting Qt in order to maintain the integrity of the Windows Phone platform. Apps developed for all Windows Phones must be made with Microsoft’s native toolkits such as Silverlight and XNA.

“It may be a tough pill to swallow … but it’s for the better,” Watson said.” Any good developer is going to learn new languages coming along. It’s about finding the right tools to get the job done.”

But for Qt developer Kruse, Nokia’s switch to Windows Phone 7 means a lot more than just learning new programming languages. It’s a matter of the risks and costs involved in coding for one platform and then being locked in. By contrast, with Qt, Kruse could make an app that runs on Nokia phones, Windows and Macs with minimal effort.

“In our case we make software for disabled people, and the market is so small that we simply cannot afford to develop for a platform whose success is by no means certain,” Kruse said. “Qt would have taken that risk away. Now we will have to go for Android. At least there we know this is not going away.”

Watson said Microsoft understands the importance of the Nokia developer community, and the company would work hard to keep the community loyal in light of the new partnership. To recruit developers for Windows Phone 7, Microsoft has handed out free devices for programmers to test their apps, and sometimes even offered to fly them to the Microsoft campus to get a crash course, Watson said.

“Our goal is making developers happy, making developers successful, making developers rich and famous,” Watson said. “They’re a very scarce resource and … I don’t want to lose any of them. We’re going to be very creative with things we can do.”

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