Dokobots game for iOS brings together the inevitable: robots and geolocation

Now, wait. Don’t just write Dokobots off because you hate Foursquare… this one has robots! While we’ve seen plenty of similar uses for geolocation, Dokobots operates as a sort of global scavenger hunt, with the ability to ‘scan’ the map of your surrounding area for items needed to charge up and repair your little robots. So far, we haven’t gotten up the steam to walk the block and a half to pick up the batteries we need, but there’s also a magnet tool for the super lazy, and other Dokobots will ‘visit’ your location over time, allowing you to record and photograph those moments for posterity. While we can’t say yet if this game has staying power in our app catalog, it’s definitely adorable at first glance. Dokobots is a free application available now in iTunes.

Dokobots game for iOS brings together the inevitable: robots and geolocation originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 12 Jan 2011 14:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hands On With PiRAWnha, a RAW Photo Editor for iPad

PiRAWnha is a RAW photo developer app for the iPad and, while it gets the job done, its a little rough (raw?) around the edges.

The app scans your photo albums for RAW images and presents them as thumbnails. Tap one and you are dropped into some simple editing controls, above which sits your unprocessed RAW image. From here you can tweak exposure, saturation, white balance, and contrast, along with several other basic adjustments. You can also add noise reduction and sharpening, and a histogram is displayed at all times to help out.

So how does it do? Not so well. First, the RAW rendering – which converts the soup of data in a RAW file into a viewable picture – is rather poor. An indoor shot, taken at a ISO 1600, shows a lot more noise than it does on either my Mac or in-camera (using the camera’s self-generated JPEG preview). It also has a lot of red speckles sprinkled over the picture. These spots disappear when you export the processed photo to a JPEG, though.

The app is also very slow. This is thanks to the iPad itself, which has barely enough RAM to do something as hard as RAW image processing. In fact, I got a low-memory warning with every button press when I first launched PiRAWnha. You’ll need to restart before you use it.

And you might want to make some coffee, too. Each edit causes the image to re-render, and it’s slow. A button push can cause a wait of around ten seconds, making editing painful.

PiRAWnha claims to be the first RAW editor for the iPad, but there are plenty of other non-RAW editors which do the job better. The only reason to edit RAW photos on the iPad is to email them, or to make a quick slideshow before you get back to your proper computer. Given that every photo-editing app will handle the JPEGs that come tucked inside your RAW images, and handle them better and faster, there seems little point in PiRAWnha.

As a proof-of-concept I like it, but as a day-to-day app I don’t. Add to this the interface design – you can only edit in portrait mode, for example, and if you tilt it into landscape orientation when viewing thumbnails, they don’t reflow to fill the screen – and you have something that is fun, but not yet fully baked. $10.

PiRAWnha [iTunes]

PiRAWnha for iPad [PiRAWnha]

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Dish Network remote access app extends its long arm to Android tablets

Dish Network is still on a mission to make sure that you get your TV Everywhere, and as of today, that means your Android tablet. We reported in November that the provider was bringing its Dish remote access app to Android, opening up the world of paid-for TV to even more smartphones. As with the smartphone app, Android tablet users will have to have a Sling-enabled device, like a Sling Adapter, to access their hard earned programming, and as with the smartphone, the tablet app is free. The Dish Network app’s got all the same functionality as its predecessor: browse and search options, DVR scheduling/management, and a remote control function. So it’s basically the same beast, but we’re definitely still impressed.

Dish Network remote access app extends its long arm to Android tablets originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Jan 2011 01:40:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hulu Plus headed to Android, no promises about when

Well, here’s a bit of welcome news from Samsung’s press conference, though it’s got little to do with Samsung itself — Hulu Plus has finally been confirmed for the Android platform. There’s been some friction between Hulu and Google as of late, but it seems preferred partner Samsung is helping to work those differences out, as Hulu CEO Jason Kilar demoed the code-complete app running on this Galaxy S smartphone. He didn’t provide a release date, though. Drat.

Hulu Plus headed to Android, no promises about when originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 20:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Flickr headed to Windows 7 and Windows Phone 7

It’s official: Flickr has announced that it’s launching an officially official Flickr app for Windows 7 and Windows Phone 7. Though we don’t know exactly when the photo sharing apps will launch, you can sign up at the source link on Flickr so they can let you know when it actually launches. In the meantime, there’s a video demo of the apps in action, and we have to say, we like what we’re seeing.

Continue reading Flickr headed to Windows 7 and Windows Phone 7

Flickr headed to Windows 7 and Windows Phone 7 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 15:12:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mac App Store Launches With Thousand Apps, Big Discounts

The Mac App Store has launched, freshly stocked with more than 1,000 OS X applications. The store comes as part of an OS X update, version 10.6.6, and is a standalone application rather than being yet another add-on to the already-creaking-and-bloated iTunes.

The store works a lot like the iOS App Store we know already: You sign in with your Apple ID, and then you can shop. Buy a Mac app, and the payment is charged to your registered credit card account. The app downloads automatically and is placed in the applications folder, with a convenient shortcut placed in the dock. (The icon actually leaps from the store window and lands in the dock — neat.)

This is clearly aimed at novice users who may never have actually downloaded and installed third-party software before, and the interface will be instantly familiar to anyone who has used the App Store in iTunes or on an iPad.

That said, there is plenty for power users, too. Apple’s flagship photo-editing software, Aperture, is in the store for just $80. You can still buy it from the conventional Apple Store, but it’ll cost the usual $200. That’s quite a saving.

The iWork office suite is in there, too, although it remains at the ‘09 version, not the new ‘11 update many were hoping for. The three iWork apps — Pages, Numbers and Keynote — cost $20 apiece, which is less than the usual $80 bundle price. If you already have these installed on your Mac, the App Store detects this and shows them as “installed,” just like on the iPad.

There are also free apps — the slick new Twitter, for example, which is the long awaited v2.0 of Tweetie for Mac -– as well as some old favorites: Angry Birds is quite something on a 27-inch iMac screen.

There are no trials in the Mac App Store, and submissions are subject to strict rules, just like the iOS store. It appears that some of these can be waived, though. Twitter is clearly using custom, nonstandard user-interface elements, and it is featured on the front page.

Apple is playing by its own rules here, too. No trial versions are allowed in the store, so developers have to host them on their own sites. Apple’s own trial for the iWork suite is on the main Apple site.

I predict that the store is going to be huge. It has the same kid-in-a-candy-store addictive qualities of the iPhone and iPad stores, along with a few features missing from the mobile versions. On the Mac, for example, all your purchases are listed under a tab in the top toolbar.

Finally, here’s a tip: Up in the Apple menu, on the top left of your screen, you may see a new entry called “App Store.” This replaces the old “Mac OS X Software” which has quietly been retired.

Mac App Store [Apple]
Apple’s Mac App Store Opens for Business [Apple]

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Mac App Store generating error messages instead of app purchases? Here’s the fix

Oh, this ain’t cool. According to the roughly gazillion complaints we received this morning upon the launch of Apple’s Mac App Store, users are seeing the ol’ “unknown error occurred (100)” message when first launching the store after the upgrade. According to TUAW, it’s a problem with the iTunes Terms and Conditions — which some users aren’t getting prompted to accept, hence the error message. What should you do if you get the error? Quit the store and reload it. If that doesn’t work, folks are finding that rebooting and then launching the store again does the trick.

Mac App Store generating error messages instead of app purchases? Here’s the fix originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 11:08:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple’s Mac App Store Now Live With 1,000 Apps [Apple]

Apple kept to their 90-days word—it’s January 6th, and the Mac App Store is ready for your custom. There’s over 1,000 apps—both free and paid-for—for Macs, with all that’s needed is Snow Leopard and an iTunes account. More »

Apple’s Mac App Store goes live

Well it’s official boys and girls — Apple’s Mac App Store is live as of this morning, and available to use and abuse via a Snow Leopard update (version 10.6.6 to be exact). The OS X application market takes the company’s wildly successful iOS App Store to its logical conclusion, bringing an orderly, structured app buying experience to desktops and laptops across the globe. The Store will launch with over 1,000 titles, including Apple standards like the iLife suite broken out into separate parts (iPhoto, iMovie, GarageBand) selling for $14.99 each, Pages, Keynote, and Numbers for $19.99 apiece, and the bank-breaking Aperture for $79.99. Of course there’ll also be third-party apps present at launch, including Autodesk Sketchbook Pro, Pixelmator, Cheetah 3D, and Flight Control HD (yes, a port of the iPad version).

The software itself will be a separate application that functions much like the App Store, providing update notifications and a universal installation process. That process, mind you, will be part of the requirements for getting your application into the store, along with Apple’s famous content policies — so we’re sure we’ll see some irate devs with painful rejection stories. Or maybe not. We know that the company is planning on getting lots of familiar developers into the Store, but we also know that some of what Apple is looking for may not gel with, say… Adobe’s installation procedures (or worse). Regardless, right now the number of apps available is small, but you can expect it to grow fast now that every Mac user will get a crack at this software. We’re going to be doing a much deeper dive on the experience and report back — until then, if you’re using it, let us know what you think in comments.

Apple’s Mac App Store goes live originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 06 Jan 2011 08:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Panasonic opens up Viera Connect apps to other manufacturers, SDK to devs & gets Hulu Plus

As the connected TV battle continues to heat up, Panasonic is arming its Viera platform by bringing in allies. Dubbed Viera Connect, it builds on the old Viera Cast system by opening up the SDK to developers, and increasing the audience by opening up access to its middleware and market for other device manufacturers. Falling somewhere between Samsung’s more closed Samsung Apps experience and the Google TV approach, Panasonic’s 2011 TVs and Blu-ray players will come out of the gate with apps like MLB.tv., Hulu Plus, NBA Gametime, Asphalt 5, Tetris and more. Even videogame peripheral manufacturer Thrustmaster is getting in the mix with two wireless gamepads. Check the press release for all the details and new apps for this year.

Continue reading Panasonic opens up Viera Connect apps to other manufacturers, SDK to devs & gets Hulu Plus

Panasonic opens up Viera Connect apps to other manufacturers, SDK to devs & gets Hulu Plus originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Jan 2011 20:48:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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