Confirmed-ish: Palm Pre Still Syncs with iTunes 8.2!

Posted on June 2, 2009 by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

iphone_piratepre

Palm faithful rejoice, Gizmodo — via an unnamed source — claims that Palm Pre still syncs with iTunes 8.2 release, same as it reportedly did with the pre-release version.

Meanwhile, Daring Fireball weighs in on the situation again, this time wondering if what Palm is doing is illegal, and if Apple stops it, whether that would be illegal. PreCentral.net, for their part, looks beyond the what to the why:

we’re increasingly getting the feeling that Palm is either trying to goad Apple into a legal showdown or they are so confident in their patent portfolio that they feel they can throw these features in Apple’s face.

To which Gruber aptly footnotes:

And, when judging the likelihood of Apple filing such a lawsuit, consider the perspective of a certain highly-competitive quasi-paranoid Apple founder and CEO who is famously sensitive to what he perceives as being “ripped off”. The one and only company to ship a product that successfully masquerades as an iPod via USB is the company whose engineering division is run by a former Apple senior VP and has hired a slew of former Apple engineers.

In — as they say — deed.

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

Confirmed-ish: Palm Pre Still Syncs with iTunes 8.2!


Apple to Charge for Redownloading iPhone Apps in iPhone OS 3.0?

Posted on by maverick.
Categories: Uncategorized.

First Look and Giveaway: Equilibrio for iPhone / iPod touch

Posted on by Steven Sande.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Filed under: , , , , ,


There's one big problem with being a TUAW blogger -- we are constantly tempted away from doing real work when developers tell us about new and fun software to try out.

That's exactly the problem I ran into when Fishing Cactus asked us to review Equilibrio (click opens iTunes), their new ball puzzle game for iPhone and iPod touch. The app, which is also available for Nintendo Wii, is an addictive game in which you roll balls made of various materials (rock, paper, steel, rubber, and more) around a maze using the iPhone's accelerometers to control where the balls go. You can gain extra points by hitting "coins" and zipping to the end of the maze quickly. There is a conquest mode, where players need to complete a series of levels, as well as a challenge mode. The app is currently available in the App Store for half-price at US$1.99, and there's also a free version -- Equilibrio Lite -- available if you want to try before you buy.

Fishing Cactus has supplied us with 5 promo codes to give away to lucky iPhone / iPod touch owners in the US and Canada. To enter the giveaway, leave us a comment with your idea for a totally different material to make an Equilibrio ball out of.

Here are the rules and a link to the obligatory legal statement:
  • Open to legal US residents of the 50 United States and the District of Columbia who are 18 and older. (Sorry, we know our international readers want to participate, but promo codes don't transfer outside the US.)
  • To enter leave a comment with an idea for what material you think a Equilibrio ball should be made of.
  • The comment must be left before Thursday, June 12, 05:00 PM Eastern Daylight Time.
  • You may enter only once.
  • Five winners will be selected in a random drawing.
  • Prize: One license each for Equilibrio (US$1.99 value)
  • Click Here for complete Official Rules.
Good luck! And check out the gallery below for some screenshots of this addictive iPhone game.

First Look and Giveaway: Equilibrio for iPhone / iPod touch originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 18:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)First Look and Giveaway: Equilibrio for iPhone / iPod touch originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 18:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Should Apple Release iPhone 3.0 and Next-Gen iPhone on the Same Day?

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

iphone-os-preview-hero20090317

First year, Apple showed off the original iPhone (2G or 1,1) and iPhone OS 1.0 in January at Macworld 2007, gave us a release date at WWDC 2007, and shipped both together at the end of June. Second year, Apple showed off iPhone OS 2.0 in March at the SDK Event but didn’t introduce iPhone 3G (1,2) until WWDC 2008 in June, and announced the release date for both — the same release date for both — July 11.

This year Apple once again showed off iPhone OS 3.0 at March at the Sneak Preview event, and is rumored to be introducing iPhone v3 (2,1) at WWDC 2009 on June 8. If that comes to pass, we also expect them to announce the release date as they have in the past. But will it once again be the same release date for both?

  • Pros: Apple likes big events and big news. Nothing is bigger than simultaneous releases. Apple also seems to like to stick to their patterns, and for the last two years software and hardware releases were one and the same. 2007 saw iPhone 3G alongside iPhone 2.0, App Store, and MobileMe (yeah, we’ll get to that in the cons…)

  • Cons: That simultaneous release last year? iTunes went down. No one could activate. MobileMe’s lack of readiness caused months of bad PR. As big a news bomb as it was, it brought the negative every bit as much as the positive.

Frequent reader, Icebike, makes a great case for a staged released in our comments. It lets Apple control the roll-out, manage expectations, and better assure quality experiences for all involved.

But that simultaneous release is just so tempting, will Apple simply charge ahead with it anyway? Should they? Is the Circus Maximus worth the attention, good and bad?

As an iPhone user and potential 3.0 and next-gen iPhone user, what would you prefer Apple do?

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

Should Apple Release iPhone 3.0 and Next-Gen iPhone on the Same Day?


Review: Doodle Jump for iPhone

Posted on by Lex Friedman.
Categories: Uncategorized.
This casual game offers simple, addictive, mindless fun. You'll find yourself playing it again and again.

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Ringtone Recorder Pro provides iPhones a roundabout route for ringtone capture

Posted on by Mel Martin.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Filed under: , ,

There is no shortage of ringtone solutions for getting tones onto the iPhone, especially after Apple opened up the phone enough to allow user generated ringtones without buying them from the iTunes store.

Now there is a bit of a new twist on the ringtone creation game. Ringtone Recorder Pro [App Store] allows you to use your iPhone as a recorder to get any sounds you can capture into your iPhone. It's US$0.99.

The method is, frankly, a bit convoluted. You hold up your iPhone to a speaker, or just talk and create a spoken ringtone. There is a 30 second limit. When you are done recording, you are asked for your email address (first use only), and then the file, in m4r (ringtone) format is mailed to you. It won't do you any good getting that file on your iPhone. You need to grab it on you laptop or desktop Mac. Drag the ringtone attachment to your iTunes library, and sync back to your phone.

Kind of a Rube Goldberg way of doing it, but those are the limitations of the current iPhone software. I'm not sure it will get any better in iPhone version 3.0 either.

At any rate, the app does what it claims to do, without any bugs or gotchas. Some people reading the description will think this app will allow you to capture music clips from your iPhone music, but that is not the case. If you really want to get a music ringtone on this, you're going to be holding this thing up to a speaker.

Audio quality is good, but it is hardly an ideal way to capture music. It worked very well for capturing my voice. There is a free version [App Store] of this application if you want to try it. It has ads, is slower at saving your recording, and is not quite as easy to use.

Ringtone Recorder Pro provides iPhones a roundabout route for ringtone capture originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)Ringtone Recorder Pro provides iPhones a roundabout route for ringtone capture originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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App Review: Peggle for iPhone

Posted on by Chris Vitek.
Categories: Uncategorized.

peggle_0007

(Peggle Forum Review by cjvitek For more Forum Reviews, see the TiPb iPhone App Store Forum Review Index!)

With all the talk recently about Peggle, I was surprised that it hasn’t been reviewed (although it did get a “quick app” and a pick of the week) so I thought I would download and give it a try. And, well, Peggle has managed to crack my “regular game rotation” that currently consists of only a few other games.

Let me start by saying that as Peggle loads, they took a page from The Sims and actually make you want to read the loading messages.

Peggle is a game based on skill and luck, similar to Pachinko. Your goal is to shoot balls into a pachinko-style board with “pegs”, trying to remove all the orange pegs and blocks within a certain number of shots. You can have various power up abilities, lucky shots or skill shots increase your score, and you can earn extra balls by “saving” your ball as it falls or by scoring a certain number of points within a shot. The enjoyment on Peggle comes from two main factors in my mind - the various power up abilities and the variety of boards.

If you start playing in adventure mode, you are led through the game by ten “masters”, each of whom has a different power up ability. As they guide you through the game, they teach you the details and the best ways to use their abilities. Once you finish with them, you go back through the same levels with the option of choosing the power up ability you want for each board.

The second biggest positive from the game is the variety of boards. You start off with a simple pachinko style board, but they gradually become more and more complex - with bumpers, with moving parts, with time warps, etc. Each level has specific characteristics that make it challenging, so no two levels will be played the same way. As your progress through the adventure mode, you get various trophies to add to your collection (I am currently running through them the second time in “Master” mode).

There are other game modes as well. Quick play lets you choose a level to play by itself. Challenge mode lets you play a specific levle with a specific challenge (beat a certain number of points, more orange pegs than normal, etc). And dual mode is a two play battle where you play on the same board against either the computer or a friend. Unfortunately, the dual mode is a “pass the iPhone” multiplayer so you can’t play via wifi. I was also hoping to see a direct battle where you are both shooting balls at the same time (and can interfere with each other) but that doesn’t happen.

Let me just add, when you finish a level, they play Ode to Joy. There nothing quite like having that blast from your iPhone to actually make you feel like you have accomplished something! The game can be replayed multiple time because the placement of the orange pegs (as well as the various power-up and other pegs) are randomized so your strategy can vary even when replaying the same level!

Conclusion

All in all, this is really a great game. Aside from the few minor wishes I had for multiplayer, I could find nothing wrong with this game, and it has “earned” a spot on my permanent rotation of games. At $4.99, the price isn’t cheap, but it is well worth it for a game that can be played over and over.

Pros:

  • Good puzzle/arcade game
  • Involves strategy and luck
  • Lots of replay-ability
  • Has a two player mode
  • Multiple play modes

Cons

  • Two player mode is only “pass the iPhone”, no wifi

TiPb Review Rating

5 Star App

[<a href="100 Sounds is available for $4.99 via the iTunes App Store]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

App Review: Peggle for iPhone


iPhone vs. BlackBerry Deathmatch

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

blackberry_odin_iclone

While the iPhone vs. Palm Pre is the current darling of the blogerati (we’re not sure anyone in the mainstream is even aware of it…), we can’t forget that most iconic of rivalries: iPhone vs. BlackBerry. Not when Infoworld has written up the provocatively titled: “Deathmatch: BlackBerry versus iPhone — It’s time for us to bury the BlackBerry and move on to modern mobile — even for e-mail”.

In the massive, 8-page-jump article, the author contends that while the BlackBerry still scores points for security, non-Exchange email, hardware keyboard, and lack of good web browsing (for bosses who don’t want their employees using WebApps), the summation states:

For everyone else, the BlackBerry is yesterday’s mobile messenger, way past its prime and heading toward retirement. The iPhone is light-years ahead of the BlackBerry on almost every count. RIM should be ashamed.

Ouch. We’re sure our friends over at CrackBerry.com would beg to differ, but… ouch.

Can RIM fight back with new devices like the BlackBerry Tour and impending Storm 2, or — like Palm with the Pre and Microsoft with Windows Mobile 7 — will RIM have to “spend time in the desert” and come out with a rebuilt, revamped, new BlackBerry OS for the next wave of mobile computers?

[Thanks to Matt and everyone who sent this in!]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

iPhone vs. BlackBerry Deathmatch


Dev Team Confirm iTunes 8.2 Breaks Jaibreaking; Updated QuickPwn & PwnageTool after iPhone OS 3.0 is Released

Posted on by iPhoneHacks.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Lonely Planet offers free iPhone guide free to help WWDC-goers

Posted on by David Dahlquist.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Lonely Planet is offering its San Francisco iPhone guide, normally $16, free of charge for a limited time, in anticipation of WWDC.

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Apple Finishes Push Notification Beta Tests for iPhone 3.0

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Push Notification tests over

Confession: We received reports of this going back last week, but kinda thought it was known the tests were for a limited time (originally scheduled for a week, if memory serves). MacRumors, however, reminds us not to take such things for granted.

So, yep, Apple has completed the pre-WWDC beta testing for Push Notification. Is it enough to make sure the audacious system is as bullet proof as possible, given the severe problems MobileMe’s launch suffered last year?

Hey, we’re just happy Apple did some outside testing at all. (Baby steps and all that). If it turns out they need it, we hope they come back for a second round. As many rounds as it takes, actually. Push Notification has to “just work” at launch.

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

Apple Finishes Push Notification Beta Tests for iPhone 3.0


Lonely Planet San Francisco City Guide for iPhone: Now Pre-WWDC Free!

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Lonely Planet San Francisco City Guide for iPhone

In what might be the first and most widely accessible bit of WWDC schwag, Lonely Planet has made their San Francisco City Guide free for a limited time. [Usually $15.99 - iTunes link]

Whether you’re going to San Fran for WWDC, for any reason at any time at all, or just want you some free Golden Gated goodness for your iPhone, go grab it while it lasts!

[Via TUAW, thanks to Jamesus for the tip]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

Lonely Planet San Francisco City Guide for iPhone: Now Pre-WWDC Free!


Truphone intros Truphone 3.0 for iPod touch

Posted on by Nick Spence.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Truphone has introduced Truphone 3.0, described as a major update of the free Apple iPhone software application specifically for iPod touch users.

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Review: iClipboard for iPhone

Posted on by Jeff Merron.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Want to add copy-and-paste functionality to your iPhone or iPod touch before the iPhone 3.0 update arrives? The copy-and-paste features in iClipboard work as advertised, though the app is severely hamstrung by the current iPhone OS.

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Apple Wraps Up Push Notification Testing Ahead of WWDC

Posted on by MacRumors : Mac News and Rumors.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Several weeks ago, Apple began testing high-volume Push Notifications using a special build of the AP Mobile iPhone application distributed to developers testing beta versions of the upcoming iPhone OS 3.0. While the test was scheduled to last one w...

Lonely Planet San Francisco City Guide for iPhone free for a limited time

Posted on by Victor Agreda, Jr..
Categories: Uncategorized.

Filed under: , , , ,

Normally the Lonely Planet guides for iPhone are $15.99, so any way you look at it, getting the San Francisco guide (iTunes link) for free is a great purchase. At worst you'll see if you like the Lonely Planet way of doing things in a travel guide and at best you might discover something new in San Francisco. Yep, the guide is free in anticipation of WWDC, allowing attendees to do a little sightseeing if Apple's sessions aren't enough for you.

I've only spent a bit of time with the app (I'm not in San Francisco, so testing the "nearby" functions won't happen until next week), but if you're familiar with the Lonely Planet guide books, you'll be pretty familiar with the content here. The app has a really long list for the table of contents, something I felt could be handled better. If you want to find travel information, for example, you'll have to scroll somewhere about 40% down -- this is not optimal if you need info in a hurry. In fact, scrolling through longs lists is so annoying Apple gave the iPod app a search tool and Coverflow browsing. Luckily the LP guide provides a text search which I found quite useful.

Browsing content is terrifically easy, with a slim design that allows you to move forward and back between articles, increase text size or go back up to whatever screen you were previously at, like a search page. Speaking of those searches and the content, a cursory search for Moscone brought up no precise info on the convention center. It is mentioned in a reference to Yerba Buena, but otherwise lacks details.

The map suffers from static information and a lack of one-way street info (kind of important in cities filled with them, but only if you drive). I much prefer the maps and interaction of the AAA Discounts app, complete with animation and cleaner graphics. There are complaints about missing hotels and whatnot, but I've never fully trusted any guidebook to find every hotel and restaurant. Plus, there's always Urbanspoon and a plethora of apps for discovering new places to eat around you.

Obviously if you are ever planning to travel to San Francisco it'd be hard to turn down a free app so full of info. I don't think it'll replace anything like your Maps app, or Urbanspoon, or Yelp-based apps, but that's not the point. As a guide full of history and photos, hotel and restaurant data, workable maps and tons of "getting around" data, the Lonely Planet San Francisco City Guide is incredibly handy.


Lonely Planet San Francisco City Guide for iPhone free for a limited time originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 11:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)Lonely Planet San Francisco City Guide for iPhone free for a limited time originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 02 Jun 2009 11:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple Makes Changes to ‘One to One’ Program

Posted on by MacRumors : Mac News and Rumors.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Apple today deployed a series of changes to its 'One to One' program that provides personalized setup and training for Mac users. The $99/year program is now available only to users who have purchased a Mac directly from an Apple sales channel (reta...

Free app re-downloads phased out with new version?

Posted on by Maggie Mills.
Categories: Uncategorized.
If this is true, it’s liable to make some iPhone users a little hot under the collar. Beta versions of the iPhone and iPod touch 3.0 firmware indicate that convenient, free re-downloading of App Store purchases directly to the phone will be phased out. Previously purchased apps can still be re-downloaded for free through iTunes and [...]

Testing company certifies new iPhones, including 32GB - and 4GB models?

Posted on by Rob Goodchild.
Categories: Uncategorized.
A standards body greenlighting cellphones for carriers has supposedly approved four new iPhone models, including a new 32GB model as well as an unusual 4GB version. A Canadian rumor is now said to be showing the smaller-capacity device. The PCS Type Review Certification Board was said on Monday to have approved new 4GB, 8GB, 16GB and [...]

Best Buy warns of low iPhone supply; issues note to staff

Posted on by Rob Goodchild.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Best Buy over the weekend became the latest Apple partner to warn staffers of dwindling iPhone supply that could leave some of its stores without product to sell for a few weeks later this month. In a memo from its corporate division, the Richfield, Minnesota-based specialty electronics retailer told mobile sales employees that the iPhone 3G [...]