The Week in iPhone Apps: Rained Out Beach Bum

I’m stuck indoors. First it was the Swine Flu, and now it’s raining. Oh well, I’m still going to equip my iPhone with apps that’ll be perfect for when the world is safer and warmer.


Doodle Jump: Kind of like a backwards Fall Down (calculator game) meets Space Invaders, this application is another mindless, yet quite addicting, game where your objective is to jump to the highest spot in the universe. Moreover, you can also compete with people around the globe, all for $1.


Hottie Detector: Maybe you’re drunk at a bar with lower inhibitions, or you’re looking to knock down a few egos, or even prove to your friends how hot a chick is, this hottie meter will analyze how hot that hottie truly is on the spot. $1 for your lack of judgement.


Trivial Pursuit: Once just a hot board game played with family and friends, Trivial Pursuit became a confusing TV game show, hosted by Peter Brady in the flesh. If you’re not into shouting at the TV or you think board games are too old-school, this app puts the old game on a new platform with 1,000 new questions and better graphics. $5.


Mock Draft: Get ready for the NFL season with this Mock Draft application, that’ll let you become a general manager and scout the best college football players for your own all-star team. It’s on sale only this week only for $2 (normally $5).


Radiation Passport: If you’re looking for the best ways to potentially gain superpowers—or you’re trying to avoid radioactive spiders and possibly cancer—this application will help you log and calculate your run-ins with radiation and estimate your cancer risks. Stay cancer free for $3.



This Week’s App News On Giz:

Swine Flu Tracker iPhone App Allows You to Panic Anywhere

Morse-It iPhone App Makes Samuel Morse Proud on His Birthday

GV Mobile iPhone App Hands On

Apple Is Serious About Gaming: Steals Xbox Senior Director of Strategy

Perfect Cocaine Simulator Will Never Make It to the iPhone App Store

Reason #1 to Get Epicurious iPhone App: Entire Contents of big Yellow Cookbook

Grab the Ask a Ninja iPhone Game Now

iPhone Developers Threatening Apple Over Outrageous App Payment Delays

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.

iPhone OS 3.0 beta 4, iTunes 8.2 pre-release now live

Just two weeks after the last revision went up, Apple’s released iPhone OS 3.0 beta 4 to the developer community alongside an iTunes 8.2 pre-release. No word yet on what has / hasn’t been updated, but we do know the new iTunes is required to activate beta 4. More information as we get it.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in!]

Update: We’ve toyed with beta 4 for just a few quick moments now, and naturally, the first thing we had to check out was that previously-empty “Store” settings pane. It’s now populated, and it’s mega-boring; all it does is allow you to sign in and out of your iTunes account, and while signed in, there’s an Account Info button that lets you get booted out to an unstyled web page where you can view and edit your credit card information and the like. On the iTunes 8.2 side of things, we noticed that we were explicitly warned that the app would verify that our phone was activated for use with the beta firmware — we don’t remember seeing that before — and the Gracenote legal mumbo jumbo in the About window now specifically calls out both DVD and Blu-ray metadata, which we’re taking as a promising sign of playback support in the not-too-distant future. Thanks, David!

iPhone OS 3.0 beta 4, iTunes 8.2 pre-release now live originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Apr 2009 22:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Week in iPhone Apps: ONE BILLION APPS

Can you believe it? If this weekly column didn’t exist, Apple would only be at about 999,999,233. I can now die happy: I’ve made a difference in this world.

And so have you! Now, on with your regularly scheduled roundup:

Flick NBA Basketball: It hasn’t hit the store yet, but developers Freeverse gave us an exclusive look at this NBA shooter. NBA Jam it is not, but it puts the tried and true wobbly gauge to use to play in 3-point shootouts, games of HORSE and more. There’s a real NBA license and tons of real players (here, I am @THE_REAL_SHAQ of course), and it’s pretty fun. Price yet unknown, but watch for it in the store any day now.

Convertbot Mini: We loved the original $2 Convertbot, so we were overjoyed to hear that a free lite version has now hit the store. It limits you to converting area, length, mass, temperature and volume only, but it’s a good way to get a taste of the best looking (and sounding) conversion app around. Free

Terminate Me: By now, at least 25% of your Facebook friends have changed their profile photo to a Terminated robot, and that’s cool. This is an easy way to make said Facebook profile photos on your iPhone. Free

Toilet Ninja: OK, here’s a soundboard I can get behind. It simulates the noisemaking capabilities of Japanese toilets to hide the dirty deeds being done within. Waterfalls, crows, fireworks—all preferable to bathroom sounds to some. Enjoy. $1.

Heat Pad: Yeah, it’s just touchscreen tricks—turning your capacitive zaps into a simulation of a heatmap. But it’s selling (or, downloading, since it’s free) like hot cakes. See what all the fuss is about. Free.

This Week’s App News On Giz:

Paul van Dyk Pitches You the Paul van Dyk iPhone App

Apple Hits One Billion Apps

Apple Apologizes for Approving Baby Shaker iPhone Game

Ask a Ninja iPhone Game Preview

Apple’s Shaky Standards: Baby Shaker iPhone App Approved, Quickly Yanked

iPhone App Hides Your Snoring or Fapfapfapping With Boring Office Sounds

iPhone 3.0 Will Have “Jibbler” Voice Controls, Talk Back to You Like iPod Shuffle

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.

How We Listen: A Timeline of Audio Formats

Humans have been writing music for at least as long as we’ve been recording history. It was storing it that took a little more time. Here are all the ways we’ve done it to date:

For full resolution, click here.

It wasn’t until the beginning of the 20th century that mass-produced recordings were available to the average person—the concept of buying music is amazingly new. (Or to some, ooooooold.) Just a century ago, the first records began to do for music what the Gutenberg press did for words. Before them, music was handed crudely from person to person; after, it could reach millions, untouched and unspoiled.

If we couldn’t record music, the Beatles would have never left Liverpool. By the same token the Jonas Brothers would have never left Georgia or Disney World or the Old Testament or wherever the hell they came from. Talk about progress! There may be no accounting for taste, but you can thank these reproducible formats for the very existence of the notion of pop music.

Listening Test: It’s music tech week at Gizmodo.

Discovering Music in 2009: The New Tools

MTV doesn’t play music videos. Magazines are dying. Radio is all about the $$$. It’s no secret the old modes of music discovery have been thrown out the window. Thankfully, new music-finders are here:

I think anyone reading this understands that the internet is the new trading post for artists, listeners, critics and salesmen. It’s impossible to avoid some of the marketing campaigns carried out on MySpace and YouTube, but mostly music’s move to the internet gives listeners more power to develop their own tastes, for better or for worse. You can turn to MP3 stores, recommendation services, internet radio and podcasts, MySpace—and even personal music blogs and forums that’ll help you “sample” pirated music. Here’s my take on each method of discovery and the relevance it has to listeners:

Recommendation Services

The Pandoras, Rhapsodys and Last.fms of the world are nice, because they do most of the discovery work for you, without pushing some corporate agenda on you behind the scenes (…ahem…Clear Channel). Even better, these services cater their first song selections around your initially revealed tastes, and as you give the software feedback as to what you like and don’t like, they continue to refine and improve their artist recommendations. Zune’s Mixview also provides a similar service, visually recommending similar artists and songs to those already in your library.

But my problem with a service like this is that you don’t necessarily get music that’s really new or groundbreaking. Sure, it might be new or exciting to the casual music fan, or just someone who spends all their time listening to these services, but for the true junkie—okay, maybe “music snob”—it’s hard to really be wowed by any of these services. We’ve seen and heard most of it before.

MP3 Stores

Sometimes looking for new music to actually buy is a great way to discover new stuff. Whenever I stop through the legendary Amoeba Records in SF to buy actual, real CDs and vinyl, half my stack is full of stuff I’m completely unfamiliar with. The same holds true with MP3 stores.

Whether it’s the monoliths like the iTunes and Amazon mp3 stores, or smaller music peddlers like Boomkat, Bleep, Beatport or Juno, most these stores not only let you click through and listen to all the 30-clips you can handle, but they have tons of recommendations in the sidebars, allowing you to explore similar artists and sounds. The only problem with this? If you don’t want to buy all these tracks, hunting them down again is a drag. And in the case of some of the more obscure stores, you might not find the songs anywhere else.

Internet Radio and Podcasts
The beautiful thing about radio in its prime was that, top hits and genres-aside, you never knew what you were going to hear at any specific moment. That unpredictability has an addictive quality to it, and internet radio preserves that spirit to a degree. Though not as popular in the era of the iPod, I still tune in to internet radio stations when I’m feeling bored with my music collection.

Two of my personal favorites are KCRW out of LA, which sticks to indie and the non-top-40 pop hits, and Rinse FM out of London, which has a current rotation of DJs spinning Grime, Dubstep, House and whatever other electronic genres are currently bubbling over there. My favorite thing about these two stations are that they put the content above all else—playing music they like, and not necessarily music that will sell. (On perhaps the complete other end of the music spectrum, Wilson recommends similarly free-minded stations WFUV in New York, and KEXP in Seattle.)

The risk you run in your path of discovery, however, is that if your ears are at the mercy of the DJ you’re listening to on internet radio, and if you don’t like their taste, hard luck.

MySpace and Twitter

This is what I sort of view as the great democratic project in music. The complaint while the internet was in its infancy was that big media and big corporations had too much influence over what music made it, and what didn’t. Obviously that’s all changed, in large part to MySpace.

As a social media service at large, MySpace is an eyesore and an abomination. But as a place to discover new music, believe it or not, it’s an invaluable goldmine. Big artists, small artists, fat artists, skinny artists—hell, your mom—all have the same basic framework at their dispersal to reach the masses when they’re using MySpace. Here you can find your favorite established artists sneaking new tracks up on their page, you can find work from newer artists who have no official releases out, or you can stumble upon that completely random, brilliant band of 17-year-olds from Pawnee, Oklahoma throwing out avant-garde acid pop.

But the best part, is that you can click around their grid of friends, who most of the time are other musicians, and you can get lost in musical worlds you didn’t know existed. I spent eight hours doing this one night last winter, and found enough new artists and styles that kept me interested for the rest of the year.

On the Twitter side, it’s mostly just good for gathering names and news, but the fact that more musicians, writers and other people of interest are using the service to jot down thoughts means you get to see what they’re into at any given moment. People ranging from The Root’s ?uestlove, to The New Yorker’s music writer Sasha Frere-Jones, to Diplo all twitter frequently about the new music they’re digging at the time.

The Online Music Media

The big music magazines, like Rolling Stone and The Source, went from influential and respected in their prime for their great taste and writing, to walking punchlines later on for their willingness to make a buck at the cost of content. What this did was open the door for music blogs to jump in and give readers a new place to figure out what’s new and good in the world of tunes.

Most of the bigger/more general music blogs (Pitchfork, Stereogum, Gorilla vs Bear) will never be the first ones to break a new artist, but they will be quick to tell you when known artists have new works available or coming out soon. Smaller, niche blogs (The Fader, Xlr8r, Valerie), however, will cultivate their sites like boutiques of taste, and always look for what’s next in music, as opposed to what’s now.

Filtering through sites like this takes a decent amount of work, however, and is for the dedicated music fan. Lesser enthusiasts need not apply.

“Sampling”

The Somali method is for the most hardcore of the hardcore. People who don’t want to wait for the media to tell them what’s what, and would rather just “sample” it for themselves, hit the internet hard and heavy for albums that leak weeks, sometimes months, ahead of their release.

“Sampling” these albums is not for the faint of heart. It takes a general sense of music knowledge, music news, ability to follow the right websites and some technical know how. Bittorrent (and once upon a time, Oink…RIP) is a hotbed for many music leaks as they hit, but since it’s tough to mask your IP address if you’re not in a private community, it’s easier to “sample” the same album using RapidShare, MegaUpload or Mediafire. (In case you’re wondering, avoid RapidShare at all costs, use Mediafire whenever possible…you’ll save like 5 years of your life).

Generally the best place to “sample” these links to new album leaks are in the threads music-related forums. This could be a forum for an artist, a record label, a genre, or just music in general, but people always start an upload thread full of links for you to troll.

There are also blogs and sites that keep track of the latest leaks. Bolachas Gratis is probably the most famous of the bunch, famously hopping from blog service to blog service, finding a new home to post links to albums for you to “sample.” Nodata.tv aims to do something similar, while there’s another site, Did It Leak, that just lists albums it’s seen floating around the internet. They even have a Twitter feed.

These days, once you have an album title, its as simple as visiting Google Blog Search, MAYBE typing an album name in the search bar in quotes, and MAYBE adding a 2009 and “+rar” or “+zip” to the search string (NO IDEA what those mean!). Search around for a few bit blogs that may have a link, and bam—new music to “sample”.

This is undoubtedly the best method for pure discovery, because it lets you chase down the latest and greatest in music without being tainted by anyone else’s opinion or tastes. But it also requires an obsessive, nerdish approach to music fandom that may have ramifications on your social life. Not to mention a total disregard for the economics of the music business, and for the needs of artists to be remunerated for their work. So, you know, proceed with caution.


Listening Test: It’s music tech week at Gizmodo.

Apple reveals top 20 free / paid iPhone apps, iFart Mobile only ranks 16th

To think, it’s only been three months since we talked about Apple’s iTunes store crossing the 500 million download threshold, and now it looks like the gang in Cupertino are gearing up to celebrate their 1 billionth app. To celebrate, the company’s released two lists showcasing the top 20 free and paid iPhone apps, respectively. Presuming these are in order (they’re certainly not alphabetical), that puts Crash Bandicoot Nitro Kart 3D for paid apps and Facebook for free apps. Interestingly, Crash shares with Super Monkey Ball the dubious honor of being the only two apps on the list at $5.99, the highest price here. Eight of the paid apps cost $0.99 apiece, and the rest fall somewhere in between. Check out both lists after the break.

[Via i4u]

Continue reading Apple reveals top 20 free / paid iPhone apps, iFart Mobile only ranks 16th

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Apple reveals top 20 free / paid iPhone apps, iFart Mobile only ranks 16th originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 14 Apr 2009 03:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iTunes Store’s new pricing scheme affects the charts, that Lightspeed Champion guy expresses surprise

An interesting sidenote on the intersection of music and commerce: Billboard reported last week that the iTunes Store’s new variable pricing plan has had a bit of an impact on sales rankings on individual tracks, giving $.99 songs an advantage over their $1.29 counterparts. According to the magazine, numbers for Wednesday, April 8, show that the iTunes Top 100 chart had 40 songs at the $1.29 price point, and 60 at $0.99 — the premium songs slid an average of 5.3 places, while the $0.99 songs gained roughly 2.5 chart positions. On Thursday the trend continued, with the 53 songs priced at $0.99 rising roughly 1.66 places on the chart, while the remaining songs — priced at $1.29 — lost an average of two chart positions. None of which answers the most pressing question: When will Miley Cyrus’s reign of terror come to an end?

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iTunes Store’s new pricing scheme affects the charts, that Lightspeed Champion guy expresses surprise originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 12 Apr 2009 21:06:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Week in iPhone Apps: Rocks!

Going to Coachella? They’ve released an iPhone app that should be standard for every big music festival ever. Plus, the most addicting iPhone game yet? All in a week’s work in the App Store.

Coachella: I haven’t been to a big festival in a while, but this app really makes me want to go to Coachella, even though Paul McCartney is headlining one of the nights. On top of a complete schedule of who’s playing where and when, the app can also help you and your iPhone equipped friends find each other amidst all the clouds of hash smoke by updating your GPS location. And you can also browse photos taken during the event. Very cool, and free.

Tap Tap Coldplay: It was only a matter of time before megarockers Coldplay got the Tapulous treatment. Now you can pretend to be summoning dulcet mainstream pop with the tap of a touchscreen. Someday it will be that easy. $5.

Doodle Jump: This game has such a great graphic style, I almost wouldn’t care if it was kind of boring or awkward. But it is the opposite of both of those things: using some of the most subtle and accurate tilt controls I’ve yet played with, you guide your little Q-Bert looking guy on his springy journey up, up, up a sheet of graph paper, blasting baddies with nose balls along the way. Laugh with delight as you blow past other players’ actual high score marks scribbled in the margins. This game is so fun. $1

GoodCab BadCab: This is more a fun idea than a great one, as I can’t quite see what functional use this would ever have, but GoodCab BadCab prompts you to enter your cabbie’s medallion number and then rate him or her on driving abilities, friendliness, whether help was given with your bags, and of course, the odor of the cab’s interior, be it pleasant or horrible. What you would then do with this information is anyone’s guess. Maybe a prize for the top-ranked cabbie? It’s free.

Coupon Sherpa: Coupon Sherpa collects scannable coupons for a large assortment of major retailers, letting you browse for currently usable coupons in the store, simply having the cashier zap your iPhone screen with the barcode reader. The list of supported stores is promised to grow—right now according to Brian at Wired it includes several biggies like Walgreens, Target and Macy’s but is lacking essentials like Starbucks, Best Buy or Walmart. $2

This Week’s App News on Giz:

MLB’s Incredible Web Video Plans: HD With Mosaic Picture-in-Picture, Live Streaming to iPhone

Giz Explains: All The Smartphone Mobile App Stores

Nine Inch Nails Shows Every Other Band How to Make an Awesome iPhone App

Google Voice App Comes to iPhone and iPod Touch Soon

The Official Star Trek Phaser iPhone App

Diddy’s Official iPhone App Makes Him Officially Everywhere

Galaga Remix Lightning Review: Classic Space Shootin’ For iPhone

Myst For iPhone Preview Video: Hope You Like Tapping

Apple Counts Down Up to 1 Billion Apps: Win $10,000 iTunes Gift Card, MacBook Pro and More

Also, be sure to check out our new weekly Android App of the Week picks.

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.

Apple anxiously awaits the selling of their billionth App download celebration

Apple’s going all out in anticipation of a landmark for the company — the downloading of one billion apps in the App store. Not bad for nine months of work, if you think about it: over 110 million a month, in fact. About 27 million a week… well, you get the idea. Oh yeah, they’re giving away a bunch of stuff too, so be sure to check that out if the mood strikes you.

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Apple anxiously awaits the selling of their billionth App download celebration originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 10 Apr 2009 12:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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PSA: Advantageous auto-checks Amazon MP3 pricing from iTunes

So now that iTunes variable pricing is live, cross-shopping with Amazon is going to be a Thing — and while we’re certain slicker utilities will pop up soon, for right now we’d install Advantageous, which is just a little script that automates an Amazon search query from within iTunes. Yeah, it’s not perfect — it fails if you’re logged in with iTunes store credit and it’s far from bulletproof otherwise — but it’s a fine way to at least have kids or the less computer-savvy stop and check prices with at least one competitor before laying down an extra thirty cents on each purchase. This is has been a public service announcement… with guitars.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Read – Advantageous for Windows
Read – Advantageous for Mac

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PSA: Advantageous auto-checks Amazon MP3 pricing from iTunes originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Apr 2009 13:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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