David Hockney paints with his iPhone, results not typical

Artist David Hockney isn’t afraid of picking up new media — over the years, he’s used Polaroids, photocollages, and even fax machines to create his art — in addition to regular, old-fashioned painting. Now, he’s taken to using his iPhone to create new works of art. The resultant “paintings” have been exhibited at the Tate Gallery and Royal Academy in London, as well as galleries in Los Angeles and Germany. Like artist Jorge Colombo (whose iPhone fingerpainting was featured on the cover of The New Yorker), Hockney uses the iPhone app Brushes to create his works. In an interview with the New York Review of Books, Hockney notes that he prefers and still uses the original version of the app, not the more recent updates. Hmm… maybe the reason our own Brushes paintings stink is because we’re using the update!

[Via All Things D]

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This Week’s 10 Best iPhone Apps

In this week’s net-neutral iPhone app roundup: Wild Things, physics games, Photoshop!, Twitter again (but that’s ok!), horse music, human music, and much, much more.

The Best

Where the Wild Things Are: Promotional apps are normally garbage, and in a few areas, this is a little fluffy (though there’s some neat media in here—it’s fairly generous). But hey, the people marketing this movie know exactly whose heartstrings they’re pulling at, and how to pull them. And the 3D monster toy is genuinely cool. Free.

iBlast Moki: A visually stunning physics-based platformer, with bombs. The levels are puzzles, but they don’t feel like work at all. A very, very safe buy at a dollar.

Photoshop: This app bears almost no resemblance to the Photoshop we all know and steal love. That’s fine though, because it’s a serviceable photo-editing (on the iPhone, this means filters, cropping, and a few other tricks) app that is free, unlike virtually all of its competition.

Tweetie: Few people like Twitter as much as Matt, and Matt likes few things as much as Tweetie 2: The $3 app is described as

the most polished Twitter app yet, oozing slickness with every swipe. Yet, it’s exploding with new features, and still really fast.

“Tweet tweet?” “Who’s there?” “THE WORST JOKE YOU’VE EVER HEARD.”

Weight Watchers: I’ve never thought about my diet too much, which means my life will be short, brutal and tasty. But I have seen people using WeightWatchers, and they seemed to sorta like it, and sometime get less fat! An iPhone app pretty much seems like the ideal tool for keeping a food journal, plus this one’s free.

Pet Acoustics: Excuse me everyone, I’ve got an announcement: People write muzak for dogs. And cats. And horses! Then they put it in iPhone apps, so you can use it to soothe your stable of animals, uh, on the go? This makes me laugh, which makes me happy. (Though I have absolutely no idea if it works, because my Labrador only listens to gangsta rap.) Two dollars.

Command & Conquer: Red Alert: This one isn’t out yet, but I defy you to name a game franchise that needs an iPhone title more than C&C. TouchArcade got an early hands-on, and they say it’s fantastic—and surprisingly faithful to the original.

Rock Band: Another long-overdue addition to the store, Rock Band, the app, is kind of a jerk: While it was taking foreeever to show up, companies like Tapulous stepped in an made decent rhythm games to fill the void. Now that it’s here, and it looks great—multiple instruments, a decent song list—it’s going to poop on everyone else’s party. It’ll be here in a few weeks, price TBD.

MotionX Drive GPS: It’s not brand-new, but it’s too good a value not to mention here. $3 a month, or 25 per year is amazing for a turn-by-turn nav app, and Wilson enthusiastically deemed it to be fine:

I am not going to tell you this is the best turn-by-turn road navigation app in the world. The designers made some funny UI choices, there’s no multi-destination or point-on-map routing, it doesn’t have text-to-speech, and it only runs in portrait mode, taking up awkward space on my dashboard. Still, there’s almost no reason not to get it.

Indeed.

iLickit: This app deserves more credit than I can give it for being the first designed for use with the human tongue. Ho ho, you wacky app developers, what’s next!? Wait, ugh, don’t tell me. Not in the store, yet.

Honorable mentions

Explore the New York City Which Could’ve Been With the Phantom City iPhone App

PewPewPew (With Your iPhone): Ahem:

pewpewpewpew, bangbangbang boomPEW, swishpewpewpewpew.

Also, augmented reality. A dollar.

iSheriff: It’s a lot like that PewPew AR app above, rebalanced: It’s free, which is cool; and it’s not quite as playful: it puts people in zoomable crosshairs, and has gore effects, which makes it a little creepy.

Good Things Do Come in Threes with Tap Tap Revenge 3

MapQuest Stumbles Back Into the App Store With Budget Turn-by-Turn

FHM: DUDE MAG, in an app. Lots of near-nakedness here, with daily updated FHM non-boob content too. $2.

Let’s Draw Some Sheep: No, really, let’s draw some sheep! Because that’s just about all you can do with this moderately charming little app. $1.

Other App News on Giz

• ChilliX, who makes all kinds of neat, usually paid iPhone apps, is giving away their entire catalog for free this weekend.

Flash Apps to Come to the iPhone, But Not to Safari

The iPhone App Store Gold Rush May Be Running Low on Gold

Apocalypse Nigh, AT&T Opens Network for VoIP Over 3G on 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. Have a great weekend, everybody!

Tweetie 2 Review: The Best iPhone Twitter App, Period

Tweetie 2 is so far ahead of every other iPhone Twitter app, it’s astounding.

It’s the most polished Twitter app yet, oozing slickness with every swipe. Yet, it’s exploding with new features, and still really fast. It manages to cram in every possible feature you could possibly want in a Twitter app—offline reading!—without feeling too complicated or bloated. Truthfully, it’s a brand new, totally different app from the original, down to the core. If you already own Tweetie and don’t buy Tweetie 2 because you feel like you shouldn’t have to spend another $3, Alyssa Milano, it’s your loss.

Form, Oh Shiny Form

The main Tweetie 2 interface feels just like the original—awesome—with two big differences: The chat bubbles are dead, replaced by a solid stream of tweets, and glowing notification orbs tell you when new tweets, mentions or direct messages are waiting for you. That’s a huge functional leap over the original Tweetie, where you had to click over to each section to see if you had new messages. Plus, the orbs just look cool, like they’re cut off by the bottom of the screen. The one flaw here is that sometimes it doesn’t register you’ve read a message, so you’ll wind up clearing the orb for the same message twice.

How do you refresh? When you hit the top of a timeline and keep pulling down, an arrow pops into sight that tells you to pull down, and as you down, it smoothly spins upward, telling you to release to refresh. It’s simple, but slick. There’s also a search bar up there, so you can look through all the tweets you have pulled up for something that caught your eye.

So Much Function

The greatest new feature in Tweetie 2 is its offline powers. They’re great. Not only does it cache tweets to read offline, but you have other Twitter capabilities, like adding favorites, which are synced up the next time you go back online. A basic drafts manager lets you store and edit tweets to send later.

You can set up virtual push notifications so you can see whenever somebody you follow drops a Tweet bomb, like RealTracyMorgan. (They show up as a text message from 40404, i.e., Twitter.) Sadly, this doesn’t extend to @replies, but it’s for following a particular person (or persons, if you want a lot of messages about tweets). Other new functional awesomeness includes auto-complete for @replying and direct messaging people who have confusing-ass usernames you can’t remember (though you have to go to the user, and then compose a message to them), the ability to link people with address cards, a very pretty nearby tweet search, and integration with multiple services like Instapaper and Tweet Blocker.

Buy It Now

If you’ve never paid for a Twitter app or even if you have, Tweetie 2 is well worth the measly three bucks it costs. It’s fast, it’s got full offline powers and it’s so polished your iPhone will slip out of your hand while you’re using it. It’s not perfect, but it’s the closest yet.

Super smooth UI, gushing with polish and animations


Exceptionally good offline powers


Feature-packed without feeling bloated


No real syncing with desktop app


No real push notifications


[iTunes, Atebits]

Apocalypse Nigh, AT&T Opens Network for VoIP Over 3G on iPhone

Holy keee-rist. The apocalypse approaches, because AT&T has opened their network up to VoIP applications running over the air on the iPhone. In other words, AT&T is now totally cool with using Skype over 3G.

AT&T supposedly just told Apple and the FCC this afternoon that their network is ready for VoIP over 3G for the iPhone, meaning it might take a bit to show up in apps, but the floodgates are open now. And yeah, whoa. Skype over 3G has been okay on other phones that weren’t the iPhone before this, but AT&T’s now “taken the steps necessary so that Apple can enable VoIP applications on iPhone to run on AT&T’s wireless network.” Since there’s no cap on iPhone data—and AT&T says it’s still unlimited with VoIP—that means you can get the cheapest possible voice plan and talk as much as you want through VoIP apps like Skype.

We wouldn’t be totally surprised if AT&T suddenly discovering their network is ready for VoIP over 3G is at least partially motivated by the FCC’s recent crowing about net neutrality—even for mobile providers—and in reaction to the FCC’s investigation as to what exactly when down between AT&T, Apple and Google with Google Voice. This is AT&T showing Mr. FCC that they play nice and fair, and pretty please, don’t drop some government regulation on their head, like mandated neutrality. It also makes them look better as they point the finger at Google Voice for not following net neutrality conventions.

A couple of points to add: This is specifically about VoIP (very likely because of the FCC’s Google Voice curiosities), so there’s nothing to fapfapfap about on the SlingPlayer or tethering front. While Skype is the most immediate woohoo context that comes to mind, we’re actually more interested now in the possibility of an app that is even more targeted to letting you get over on AT&T and replace your voice minutes with data for phone calls.

Whatever the cause or motivations, we’re just glad to see it happen, finally. Now we’ve just gotta wait for the apps to catch up.

AT&T EXTENDS VOIP TO 3G NETWORK FOR IPHONE

DALLAS, October 6, 2009 – AT&T* today announced it has taken the steps necessary so that Apple can enable VoIP applications on iPhone to run on AT&T’s wireless network. Previously, VoIP applications on iPhone were enabled for Wi-Fi connectivity. For some time, AT&T has offered a variety of other wireless devices that enable VoIP applications on 3G, 2G and Wi-Fi networks. AT&T this afternoon informed Apple Inc. and the FCC of its decision.

In late summer, AT&T said it was taking a fresh look at VoIP capabilities on iPhone for use on AT&T’s 3G network, consistent with its regular review of device features and capabilities to ensure attractive options for consumers.

“iPhone is an innovative device that dramatically changed the game in wireless when it was introduced just two years ago,” said Ralph de la Vega, president and CEO, AT&T Mobility & Consumer Markets. “Today’s decision was made after evaluating our customers’ expectations and use of the device compared to dozens of others we offer.”

AT&T allows customers to download or launch on their wireless devices a multitude of compatible applications directly from any lawful Internet website. Additionally, because AT&T uses GSM technology, the most pervasive and open wireless technology platform in the world, we support customers using any GSM phone that works on AT&T’s frequencies.

*AT&T products and services are provided or offered by subsidiaries and affiliates of AT&T Inc. under the AT&T brand and not by AT&T Inc.

MotionX GPS Drive Review: Hands Down the Best Value In GPS Apps

People bitching about TomTom’s $100 iPhone navigation app can either a) bitch louder or b) download MotionX GPS Drive by Fullpower. It’s $3 per month or $25 per year, and it works just fine.

I am not going to tell you this is the best turn-by-turn road navigation app in the world. The designers made some funny UI choices, there’s no multi-destination or point-on-map routing, it doesn’t have text-to-speech, and it only runs in portrait mode, taking up awkward space on my dashboard. Still, there’s almost no reason not to get it.

I still think Navigon is the slickest, and ALK’s CoPilot is impressively full featured for costing just $35. But the commitment required for MotionX GPS Drive beats them all: It’s $3 to download, and you get a month of turn-by-turn directions included in that. Then, if you want, you pay either $25 for a year of full turn-by-turn, or $3 for a month—and the charges are non-recurring. You can pay the $3 only when you actually need it.

Compared to What?

Because it’s a connected product, its closest comparisons are AT&T Navigator by TeleNav ($10/month) and Gokivo by Networks In Motion (recently reduced to $5/month). It doesn’t come with 1.5GB in onboard maps like TomTom, Navigon, ALK and Sygic—instead it downloads them over the air—so you have to be in a service area when you are setting out on your destination. Still, if your phone has less memory to spare, it could be better.

Connected Services

Not only does it download Navteq maps on the fly, but it uses online search instead of stored points of interest. In theory this is better, because it means fewer wrong addresses of business who closed or moved. That’s not always the case, but I did find MotionX to have a decent online search—the first in this class that I’ve seen powered by Microsoft’s Bing.

Again, because it’s online, it has access to traffic data. At the moment, though, the app only uses traffic information in its routing, says the developers. There’s no way to check a traffic report like on other apps. However, the developers appear to be toying with a Dash-like concept too: A future version of the app may be used to gather and share its own live traffic data. There’s nothing like that now, and Fullpower won’t share details, but it sounds like fun. I also asked about live gas prices, which others offer: None now, but that will change.

Some Superficial Complaints

I did have a few cosmetic issues with the app. For starters, it doesn’t have a landscape mode, so the phone is always upright. I want landscape mode because it fits way better when it’s horizontal in the dashboard mount (which, like with all other GPS apps, will run you an extra $10-$100). That’s a fact, though Fullpower goes out of their way to say they didn’t add landscape because nobody’s asked for it yet. Until now.

Oddly enough, Fullpower is proud of their in-app compass, which I find extraneous on two levels. For one, if I’m looking at a map, no matter whether north is up or the heading is up, I know which direction I’m pointing. Additionally, that compass only works with 3GS (I believe), and the 3GS already has a compass. When do you ever pull over to the side of the road and say “if I only knew where north was!”? Maybe in the days before GPS that was an issue, but now it doesn’t matter so much. (Until the sky falls, at least.)

I would also love to customize the things I see on the main screen. At the moment, next to the upcoming turn information, it flips through assorted trip data: ETA, compass heading, distance remaining and time remaining. I really only care about ETA, so I’d like to freeze that up top, and may be get a speed indicator with speed limit warnings as well.

My final issue is more of a quirk than anything else: To view the list of upcoming turns, you have to tap the iPod button at the bottom of the screen. It’s nice to have rich iPod access in the app (all apps have a rudimentary iPod access—as long as a song is already playing, you double-tap the home button—but this does more). Still it’s weird for that all-important list of turns to be hidden under a button called “iPod.”

How Is The Price So Low?

A guy like me could bitch about this app more, trust me, but the fact is, I’ve driven with it for almost a week, and it gets you where you want to go, quickly and simply. But it’s going to sell like mad because the price of entry is the lowest around, and its two-year cost of ownership—$53 if you use it regularly—is competitive, especially when you consider that’s the initial download plus two completely optional $25 increments. By allowing you so many options to walk away, MotionX actually has you by the balls.

I have asked Fullpower and its competitors how pricing could get this crazy, with $100 apps competing with $3 apps. Fullpower’s best answer is that they’re not in any other GPS turn-by-turn business, so they don’t have to protect the price of earlier products the way TeleNav or TomTom might have to. (“If they offer a better value on the iPhone than to their existing customers, they may have challenges.”) When I asked TeleNav, makers of the $10/month AT&T Navigator and Sprint Navigator, they said, “Honestly, at a $3-per-month price point, it is unclear how a company could possibly innovate, build out features and work on the quality of the app without losing money.”

What they didn’t say, but what you’re already thinking, is that for $3 a month, it doesn’t hurt to find out. [iTunes Link]

Amazing price, and lowest possible barrier to entry

Fully functional spoken turn-by-turn navigation app


Connected to Navteq maps and Bing live local search


No landscape view (which some, like me, prefer)


Navigation screen could show more relevant data, or be more customizable


No multi-destination routing or routing to point on map, as found in other apps

For more on iPhone GPS app, check out our iPhone Navigation Battlemodo Part 1 and Part 2.

The Week In iPhone Apps: The Beautiful Game

Don’t listen to the pasty dude with the Arsenal shirt who lives downstairs—FIFA 10 isn’t the only good thing to land in the App Store this week. Not even close.

AP Stylebook: Anyone who has to crank out copy on a regular basis is probably familiar with the AP’ stylebook, but an iPhone app seems like an odd incarnation. It’s more portable and convenient that the hard copy, sure, but there’s an online version too, which makes more sense for most folks, since you don’t do a whole lot of actual writing on an iPhone, and flicking an alt+tab to your browser is faster than thumbing through an iPhone search query. Still great for the occasional spot-check, though. $29, which you should probably try to expense.

Talk Assist: This super-simple, free text-to-speech app was designed to help people who have trouble talking. However, it will almost exclusively be used by people who can speak, for laffs.

Squareball: A minimalist, but amazingly polished game that’s sort of like if Pong had levels, or if Breakout was a side-scroller. It’s really, really hard—give the free version a try before taking the two dollar dive.

cAR Locator: One old gimmick—GPS as a way to find your car—combined with a new one—an augmented reality overlay, cAR Locator is more of a tech demo or party trick than anything else, but it’s a pretty cool one. 2bux, 3GS only.

Scarab: The first iPhone literary magazine, Scarab still has a few kinks to work out. Most of all, you’ve got to purchase each issue in-app, but due to a quirk in Store policy, the app itself isn’t free. If you feel like supporting an experiment like this, feel free; there’s some neat stuff here, like the ability to listen to poems read aloud by their writers. One dollar.

Buzzd: An old BlackBerry classic, buzzd meters the amount of activity at local establishments, according to other buzzd users, and tells you where the most people are, and what they have to say about it. Think real-time Yelp, roughly. The app used to depend on other buzzd users for content; now it taps into Twitter with natural language recognition, which gives it way, way more content, and enough users, or at least unwitting contributors, to make it worthwhile even in a midsized city. Free.

FIFA 10: The only licensed soccer game in the App Store, this one’s got actual teams, actual players, and at least a passing resemblance to the FIFA franchise console games everyone goes so apeshit over. Controls are predictably a bit awkward, but there’s a lot of game here, especially for diehard soccer fans. $10.

This Week’s App News on Giz:

iPhone Gets Better Image Stabilization from Pro-Camera App

Cyclopedia Augmented Reality iPhone App Drenches Your World In Wikipedia

Apple Buys Their Very Own Maps Company (See Ya, Google Maps?)

iFukkin iPhone App Maybe Is Not What It Seems

Why iPhone TV Apps Are Doomed to Mediocrity

iPhone App Developer Jacks Your Phone Number to Pitch You More Apps

ALK CoPilot GPS Navigation App Gets iPhone Keyboard, Text-To-Speech, Other Improvements

CNN’s iPhone App Makes Other News Apps Look Lazy

iPhone Accessories Can Now Trigger App Download Prompt

Daniel Johnston’s iPhone Game Is Predictably Bizarre, Bizarrely Fun

Tweetie 2 for iPhone: Full Offline Powers, Filters and Push Notifications

Ping is Like a Free SMS Client For iPhone and iPod Touch Users

Tweet Reel iPhone App Sends 640 x 480 Video to Twitter

Ramp Champ Mixes Skeeball With Flicking

Data Shows What Everyone Knows: Gimmicky Apps Aren’t Used Frequently

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. Have a great weekend, everybody!

Zipcar Arrives in iPhone’s App Store

zipcarZipcar, a widely used car rental service, has raised the bar with tech-savviness with its new iPhone app, which launched in the App Store this week.

Available for free, the Zipcar app automatically lists nearby Zipcar locations on a map. Tapping a location pin displays cars available for rent, as well as their rental fees.

Inside the app, Zipcar members can make, change, extend and cancel reservations. A fancy feature is called “Drive,” where you can tap buttons to unlock, lock, or even honk the horn of your rental car.

We haven’t rented a Zipcar with the app just yet, but we’re interested to see how it’s working out for users. Anyone out there test drive the Zipcar app yet? Feel free to share your experience in the comments below.

Check out a video below the jump to see the Zipcar app in action.

Download Link [iTunes]

Product Page [Zipcar]


iPhone App ‘Scarab’ Reinvents the Literary Journal

scarabTech-savvy English scholars and poetry lovers: We know you’re out there. (Heck, I majored in English and I work here.) There’s an iPhone app we think you’d love. It’s called Scarab, and its goal is to reinvent the literary journal.

Scarab is a literary magazine reader that does more than load works of fiction, poetry and non-fiction on your iPhone screen. Each literary piece is accompanied with an audio reading, dictated sometimes by the author (if he or she opted to provide it), whose mugshot appears next to the title. So you get the words, the voice and even the face behind each work.

“The best part about poetry or any literature really is going to a reading and getting to hear the author’s voice,” said Brian Wilkins, editor and co-creator of Scarab, in a phone interview. “It’s almost as much fun when those two come together in one place. The iPhone really made it possible for us.”

We had some hands-on time with the app, and we absolutely love the clean interface and the idea as a whole. Once you tap a literary piece, the app immediately downloads the audio recording, and soon enough you can hit play to hear the author’s reading. Each “issue” contains a collection of literary works submitted by various authors. (The October 2009 issue features 11 pieces, including a poem from the famous Charles Simic.) The app also includes transcripts of author interviews.

Wilkins, who has a master of fine arts in poetry, developed the app with his former college roommate Ian Terrell. They’re inviting creative writers of all calibers to submit their works of fiction, non-fiction and poetry for consideration. Starving artists even have an opportunity to earn a buck, too: Each issue of Scarab costs $3 as an in-app purchase; 20 percent of every issue sale is divided among the authors. Wilkins promises the submission guidelines are open-ended, although he prefers that works stay under 2,500 words.

Here’s what bugged us: You must buy the Scarab app for $1 and then pay $3 for an issue. That means when you first buy the app, you have no content. That doesn’t seem quite right. (Update: Terrell points out in the comments below that Apple requires apps to be paid apps if they incorporate in-app purchasing.) We think it’d be a wiser idea for the creators to include at least one free promotional issue with a purchase of Scarab to entice users to purchase future issues for $3 each. That way, iPhone owners would be able to try the app before committing to spending more on content.

Still, we’re not complaining about paying for additional content. We appreciate these artists, and we know literary journals aren’t exactly moneymaking machines. We’re interested in seeing how in-app purchasing works out for Scarab, because thus far it’s not raking in much dough for some iPhone developers. But with some smart execution, we think Scarab has an opportunity to become tremendously popular among creative writers and literature enthusiasts.

Product Page [Scarab]

Download Link [iTunes]


The Week In iPhone Apps: Happy MMS Day, Everyone

Let’s take a second to reflect upon how far we’ve come, from phone owners without the near-decade-old service that people don’t really use that much, to people with it. That far! In other, slightly more scheduled iPhone news: some apps!

12Mail: MMS has only been working on the iPhone for what, four hours? So, uh, here’s an alternative! 12Mail sends short—12 second, to be exact—video messages to your Twitter or Facebook account instantly, and for free. And if you designate a recipient who also has 12Mail, they get a push notification for you message. In other words, it can behave exactly like an MMS, except without using any of your monthly allotment.

Cinq: You can access your entire Mac photo library with your iPhone over the air, sort of like with Simplify’s nearly identical photo sharing app. A couple things: Cinq’s take on the concept seems to work slightly more smoothly, and it costs one third as much, at a dollar.

Proloquo2go: It’s a little outside our normal app beat, but hey! Covering this feels good, OK? Proloquo2go is a step beyond a text-to-speech app, with a massive library of symbols and photos to allow people who have trouble speaking to communicate more easily. Three reasons this matters: It has the potential to truly help people; it’s getting rave reviews from folks who are familiar with similar tech; and even at $190, it costs less than similar dedicated devices, which can reach into the thousands. Neat stuff, to be sure. [via Technabob]

Pocket Sherpa: A wonderful concept that could do with some (read: a lot) of refinement, Pocket Sherpa combines all kinds of—mostly crowdsourced—travel data for virtually any destination in the world. It’s an accompaniment to the Localyte site, which has accumulated thousands of local volunteers, many of whom will answer individual questions sent through the app, for free.

PilotFAR: As you probably know, and Wilson made abundantly clear, the FAA’s rules about how you can use gadgets on planes are labyrinthine and frustrating. The $7 PilotFAR app might be overkill if all you want to do is harass an overzealous flight attendant with some FAA rule disputes, but then again, after reading everyone’s comments on the matter, maybe not. Oh, and all you aviators out there: This clever little app covers way, way more than onboard gadgetry—it’s a full reg book.

Dear Best Camera,
You have a stupid name, and the self-promoting captions you put on uploaded photos are annoying. But! Your filters are genuinely good, and the ability to properly layer effects turns out some fantastic imagery.

I wish you weren’t three dollars.

Love Sincerely,
John xoxo

Hava Player: Sling act-alike Hava is matching their main competitor on another point—they’ve just released an iPhone client, which controls and streams from your DVR, through a Hava box, over Wi-Fi. Feature for feature it matches up well against Sling’s offering, and it totally wins on price: It’s $10 to Sling’s $30.

This Week’s App News on Giz:

TomTom iPhone Car Kit Priced at $120, Available October

Bravo Gustavo iPhone App: Conductor’s Baton Hero?

iPhone Navigation App Battlemodo, Part II: The Best Cheap GPS App

FoodScanner iPhone App Knows Exactly How Disgusting Your Diet Is

Pizza Hut Rewards Laziness by Giving 20% Off to iPhone App Orders

TI Turns $30 Calculator Into $15 iPhone App, Swears People Still Pay for Real Deal

Griffin’s iTrip FM Transmitter: Hardware Controlled Through an iPhone App

McSweeney’s iPhone App Delivers Exclusive Content Weekly

At Gizmodo Gallery ’09: Ghostly Discovery Listening Station

Apple Approved Almost 1400 iPhone Apps Last Friday…Fourteen Freaking Hundred

Apple Finally Makes an Honest App Out of Snapture

Trope, the New Brian Eno iPhone App, Is the True Followup to Bloom

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. Have a great weekend, everybody!

iPhone Navigation App Battlemodo, Part II: The Best Cheap GPS App

When I published the turn-by-turn navigation app battlemodo, many readers asked me to evaluate some other popular choices. Because everything I do, I do for you, here are CoPilot, GoKivo and Sygic, a.k.a. the best of the rest:

I must make it clear that the reasons for choosing TomTom, Navigon and TeleNav for the first roundup was based on prior experience and reputation. Costs are higher on those apps, but it’s because you mostly know what to expect.

With this second round, things start out on shakier ground: My only experience with Networks In Motion, creators of GoKivo, was their dreadful VZNavigator app. ALK, publisher of CoPilot, has been around, but mainly in the Windows CE space. And Sygic I had honestly never heard of. The good news is, they all beat my expectations, and one of them comes out a real champion, especially when price is a major consideration.

CoPilot Live North America by ALK


The strongest of the lot, made stronger by the $35 price tag. You get a full 1.23GB map database on the phone, which I prefer because it means your device will function even in the Reallybadlands. Still, it’s not the best designed app in this category, not by a long shot.


The POI search may actually be the best one out there, because it works like a Garmin: You type in a name, and it continues to spiral outward until it finds the place you’re thinking of, even if it’s 100 miles away.


There’s a trip planner, like Navigon’s, that lets you add and delete stops, and even optimize them for maximum geographical efficiency.


The system is built to be connected, with weather and a social function “free” with purchase; live traffic and fuel prices will cost you $20 extra per year—which is still cheap compared to anything else.


ALK is promising a presumably free update with text-to-speech for street names read aloud, and monthly map “improvements,” direct to the phone.


The site has a design that would make Jon Ive spin in his grave (were he dead). Not only is it crowded and noisy, but there is too much ambiguity (not one but two get-started pop-up menus) and lack of feedback: After planning a trip you select a gas station from the quick-stop menu—does it cancel the original trip? Or just add the gas station? It sure as hell isn’t going to tell you. Some of this becomes apparent with use, but it’s still a design flaw.


The software itself was a little shaky. When I first started, it froze on a (mandatory) registration page, saying I didn’t have internet access when I did. Occasionally, it still hangs on the opening splash screen, making me force quit.


No iPhone status bar when app is running—no service indicator or clock, and a proprietary battery-life indicator that’s on the main screen but not subsidiary ones. (Navigon, TomTom, TeleNav and GoKivo all show the true iPhone status bar.)


Keyboard isn’t QWERTY, so I spent what felt like 14 whole minutes looking for the letter “z.”

Because the thing is so damn cheap—whiners, stop right here, because full-map apps can’t get any cheaper—I can forgive many of its flaws. If all you have is $35 to spend, buy this. [iTunes link]

GoKivo GPS Navigator by Networks In Motion


Like I said, my experience with previous Networks In Motion products has not been pleasant. Compared to TeleNav’s Sprint Navigator and AT&T Navigator, NIM’s VZNavigator was atrocious. So imagine my surprise when I actually enjoyed GoKivo.



There’s a “keep it simple stupid” mentality that seems to work for this interface, especially for areas you basically already know. You find your area on the map, and do a keyword search to find POIs in that particular vicinity (a la Google Maps).


The navigation screen is much improved over earlier VZNavigator screens, with clear maps.


Slide-out music transport is very cool—all apps let you pop up “now playing” to skip or adjust volume, but this lets you browse music, start songs, set shuffle and repeat, all within the navi app.


Connected data means fresh maps and traffic info—I was surprised how well it worked even on a mountain, though spotty coverage does mean unreliable response time, and possible blackout.


Vertical orientation only, no landscape view (which I prefer).


There’s no way to drop a pin on the map and navigate to it, even though the interface all but begs for that kind of interaction.


Despite using Yahoo Local database, POI search doesn’t always show you places you know are there—this seems to be affected by how zoomed-in your are on the search map, but it’s confusing.


If you don’t really know where to search for something, you’re screwed.


Subscription of $10 up front, plus $10 each month thereafter, is fiscally unsound when compared to standalone apps, even $100 TomTom. GoKivo is, in effect, $120—per year.

I would be happy to give GoKivo a “Most Improved” award, based on how far it’s come since earlier VZNavigator days. But in light of the cost structure, there’s no way to recommend it. [iTunes link]

Sygic Mobile Maps America


Sygic is, in some ways, the app I liked best of these three, but its proximity in cost and feature set to Navigon renders it more of a discounted impersonator.



There’s a powerful routing tool at the heart of Sygic, that lets you not only program a circuit of addresses, but lets you modify that circuit in many ways, simulate the run, and pull up a list of turns. It’s also very easy to add destinations straight from the map, a feature not seen on all navi apps.


Like Navigon, Sygic can read street names aloud with text-to-speech functionality.


Fairly clean navigation screen, if you can get past the Euro stylings.


There’s no woman’s voice for English turn-by-turn instructions, and the US English voice is named Lucien—no offense to dudes named Lucien, but that’s proof of what you see throughout the app: Sygic is just too country-agnostic for a great US experience.


Not only does the app block the all-important iPhone status bar at top, it doesn’t even match some take-for-granted iPhone interface behaviors. For instance, instead of scrolling down a list by flicking up, you have to tap gingerly on up and down buttons on the side.


POI search doesn’t work at significant distances: only searches your surrounding 10 or 20 miles, unless you specify another town. (Navigon has a similar problem.) POI categories are also a little jumbled.

Sygic is, at this point, $30 cheaper than Navigon, and $40 cheaper than TomTom. The thing is, it’s noticeably “cheaper” in the way it’s designed too. Despite its functionality, it’s not a good way to save money. [iTunes link]

In The End

You probably gathered by now that the good way to save money is to buy ALK’s CoPilot. If you have the $60 to spend on Sygic, get CoPilot plus a year of CoPilot connected services. You’ll still have money left over for an ice-cream cone—or a down payment on the $10-$30 car mount. GoKivo, like TeleNav’s AT&T Navigator, is out because the $10/month model doesn’t offer enough for its added cost.

If you want something more aesthetically sound than CoPilot—and there’s no shame in that—Navigon is still the best bet. And though it’s up to $90, that’s not a terrible price compared to standalone products, and it does continue to gain features like text-to-speech for free. Whether you want to pay $25 extra for Navigon’s live traffic is, for the moment, your call.

Click here for iPhone Navigation App Battlemodo, Part I, with introductory discussion about GPS iPhone apps in general.