Daily iPhone App: WordsWorth

Posted on January 3, 2012 by Kelly Hodgkins.
Categories: Uncategorized.

If you like word games like Scrabble or SpellTower, then you'll want to take a look at WordsWorth. According to the developer, WordsWorth landed in the App Store in 2009 and was one of the first word games available for the iPhone. It's very similar to PopCap's Bookworm game, but WordsWorth has a variety of features which makes it that much more enjoyable to play.

The game presents you with a grid of letters that you use to spell words. You get points for spelling words using adjacent letters, and you get more points for longer words. In single-player mode, you have control over word size, grid size and shuffle count. You can also select from the Classic game, a timed mode, and tumble mode which starts off with a few letters and gradually drops them into empty spots. Tumble mode is especially challenging as you have to spell words faster than they're falling, because the game ends when the grid is full.

WordsWorth also has a multiplayer mode, an added benefit not often found in word games. You can choose from local multiplayer, which lets you play against your friend in the next room, a Play With Friends mode that connects you with people you know and a random mode that connects you to a stranger for a quick pickup game. To take full advantage of the multiplayer aspect of the game, you need to sign up for an account with the game's developer, 99Games.

WordsWorth also supports Game Center, so you can save achievements and climb the ranks of the Leaderboard. If you setup your Facebook account with the app, you can share your game highlights with your friends. If you dislike sharing, that's fine, as it's optional. The button to share on Facebook only appears when you reach a milestone or the game ends.

WordsWorth is an excellent game for those who like variety. With all the different single and multiplayer modes, you'll never get tired of spelling words. The app is available for free, but it has ads which I found to be slightly intrusive. I kept getting one for "Sexy Singles," which makes the free app definitely not safe for kids. I would recommend spending US$1.99 and purchasing the full version which doesn't have ads.

Daily iPhone App: WordsWorth originally appeared on TUAW - The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 03 Jan 2012 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

TUAW - The Unofficial Apple WeblogDaily iPhone App: WordsWorth originally appeared on TUAW - The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 03 Jan 2012 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple’s January Media Event to Involve Digital Textbooks and Education?

Posted on by Eric Slivka.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Yesterday, AllThingsD reported that Apple is planning a late January media event in New York City that appeared to have something to do with Apple's publishing or advertising efforts rather than any hardware announcements. TechCrunch weighed in a few hours later with word that the event is indeed focused on publishing and the iBookstore.

At the time of our report on that information, we suggested that digital textbooks could be a possibility for the event given that Steve Jobs' biographer Walter Isaacson has indicated several times that one of Jobs' last goals had been to revolutionize textbooks. According to Isaacson:
His idea was to hire great textbook writers to create digital versions, and make them a feature of the iPad. In addition, he held meetings with major publishers, such as Pearson Education, about partnering with Apple.
Adding to the speculation about textbooks perhaps playing a role in the upcoming announcement is information we've received from a source indicating that Apple last month filmed a series of short interviews with textbook industry executives. The interviews are said to have been of the type that would be used in one of Apple's promotional overview videos for a new product or service.

Our source cautions us that there is no direct evidence tying the interviews to the upcoming media event and that Apple frequently films promotional video segments and commercials that never see the light of the day, but the timing of the filming seems to be in line with possible preparations for the media event.


Even more fuel for the idea that the event may carry an education focus comes from a new blog post from Clayton Morris of Fox News, who claims that the event will focus on iTunes U and perhaps textbooks.
Here is what I know from sources involved:

- This event will focus on iTunes University and Apple in education
- I learned of the event back in September when it was originally scheduled for late Fall in New York but it was eventually postponed.
- The event will be in New York rather than in the Silicon Valley because New York is more centrally located for textbook and publishing.
- This initiative has been in the making for years.
- The announcement will be small in size but large in scope: a big announcement in a demure space.
- I expect at least two large project announcements as they relate to Apple in education.
- Steve Jobs was intinimately involved with this project before his passing. He gave a hat tip to the textbook side of this project in the Isaacson biography.
- This will not be a hardware-related announcement.
Morris has a bit of a mixed track record, having weighed in just ahead of Apple's original iPad introduction in January 2010 to correctly predict the device's appearance (an easy guess) but miss with his predictions of discussion relating to iOS 4 and an update to iLife.

At the time of the iPad's debut in early 2010, Apple was said to have struck deals with textbook publishers to bring their content to the iPad, but Apple has so far been rather quiet on the topic of textbooks on the iPad and offerings have so far been limited.

Update: 9to5Mac also indicates that the iTunes team in on "lockdown mode" heading into the media event, suggesting that the announcement is indeed related to content of some sort.


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Will Apple Introduce an Entry Level iPad For $299?

Posted on by iPhoneHacks.
Categories: Uncategorized.
DigiTimes – the Taiwan-based publication continues to be one a roll. They claim that according to their supply chain sources, Apple could offer three iPad models with the launch of the third generation iPad. DigiTimes claims that Apple could offer … Continue reading


Daily Deal: Qmadix Snap-On Cover w/ Holster for iPhone 4S, iPhone 4 only $14.95

Posted on by TiPb Store.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Qmadix Snap-On Cover w/ Holster for iPhone 4S, iPhone 4 only $14.95For today only, the TiPb Store has the Qmadix Snap-On Cover w/ Holster for iPhone 4S, iPhone 4 on sale for only $14.95!. Get them before they’re gone!

Get the Qmadix Snap-On Cover w/ Holster for iPhone 4S, iPhone 4 now!



Apple to launch ‘Red Friday’ one day sale in Asia to celebrate The Year of the Dragon

Posted on by Chris Oldroyd.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Apple is set to hold a sale across Asia to celebrate The Year of the Dragon.  The sale will start on January 6 and will last for one day only. As with all Apple sales, you will not know what the sale covers until it actually starts.

Customers in China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Thailand, Singapore and the Philippines are eligible for Apple’s one-day sale, which the company is calling ‘Red Friday’, offering a range of accessories, gadgets and software — as well as some Apple Store exclusives.
Apple apparently sees Asia as a major growth market with China having the largest draw due to its huge population. Apple will look to boost sales and develop its brand by having promotions to match key dates in the Asian calendar.

Source: TNW



On moderating expectations for Apple’s 2012

Posted on by Chris Rawson.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Just after the year-end retrospectives clear newsrooms, speculators begin pounding away at the forecasts for the coming year. Every year we see wide-eyed imaginings about what Apple "could" do in the coming year, and every year someone comes out with a list that sounds just as outlandish as the "too cheap to meter" claims about nuclear power from the 1950s.

Time Techland's Tim Bajarin looks at "five industries Apple can disrupt in the near future," and the piece is typical of the overly-optimistic expectations people always seem to sprout this time of year. I'll skip over the first section related to TVs, because it's the only halfway-plausible section of the piece, and dive right into the "meal in a pill" musings that follow.

"Imagine if Apple began working with the auto companies directly and, in extreme circumstances, was perhaps able to get a 7-inch iPad into these cars," Bajarin muses, managing in one sentence to combine speculation about an industry Apple's shown no interest in entering with speculation about a product Apple's shown no interest in building. He imagines iOS device integration with car systems that would allow for Siri-activated access to things like navigation, media, text messages -- basically all the things Siri already does, but tied into the car's display.

The question for this auto integration scheme -- and a question I'll ask twice more later on -- is why Apple should bother. "People don't replace their TVs all that often" has been a major strike against speculation that Apple will produce its own TV set, and that counterargument rings even truer for cars. Apple could theoretically produce a head unit or other bit of hardware with auto integration that could be deployed across multiple auto makes and models, but the question remains: how would Apple benefit from this? Where's the money in it?

The first followup question one must always ask after "Wouldn't it be cool if," is, "How much money could Apple actually make doing this?" If the answer to that second question is, "Hmm, probably not all that much, now that I think about it," then you can safely discount the possibility of Apple entering that industry.

That goes double for the next industry in Time's list: wristwatches. "If Apple used the Nano to mirror some of the functionality of my iPhone in a watch format, the company could potentially redefine the role of the watch," Bajarin says. The problem is, the wristwatch's role has already been re-defined for the majority of consumers: it's been put on the same pile as the typewriter, slide rule, and floppy disk. Even people I know who are wristwatch enthusiasts have admitted that if you have any kind of cell phone you don't really need a watch. "I don't need to pull my watch out of my pocket to tell the time," you might say in defense of the wristwatch; "I don't need a bulky bit of rubber and metal attached to my wrist to tell the time," is my response.

Bajarin correctly points out that some nano users have been using the latest iPod nano as a watch, but most of the reviews I've seen of the so-called "iWatch" point out that while it's technically possible to do this, it doesn't work all that well -- not even as well as a conventional watch. As for the idea of putting Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, or some other connectivity between a wrist-worn nano and an iPhone, this is once again an idea that sounds good on paper but very likely sounds terrible in Apple's accounting ledgers. iPod sales have been declining for years, and the iPod touch already makes up the majority of the iPod's increasingly slim share of Apple's profits. While it certainly sounds cool, iPod-iPhone connectivity is a very niche-sounding feature in an already niche product like the iPod nano.

Apple's trend over the past few years has been to shy away from heavily promoting its outlier products like the shuffle, nano, and Classic while devoting much more focus to its wide-appeal, general-purpose products like the iPhone and iPad. That's with good reason: general-purpose products have greater appeal to a greater number of consumers, and therefore Apple can make more money selling them. The intersection between "wristwatch wearer" and "iPhone owner" and "iPod nano fan" and "gee wouldn't it be great if all these things talked to each other" speculator has to be very small -- and too small for Apple to want to bother with addressing that market.

Another market Apple's shown no interest in is home appliances, but that doesn't stop visions of iFridges dancing through people's heads. "If Apple applied their iOS software to appliances and married it to iCloud, they could turn pretty much any screen integrated into things like refrigerators, ovens or even cabinets into application-specific smart screens," Bajarin writes. This is another case of something that sounds cool at first, like something right out of a sci-fi movie or one of those concept videos of the "near future" that outfits like Microsoft like to crank out every decade or so.

It's easy to picture a scenario where you walk into your house, say "Lights," and a Siri-powered "home assistant" turns them on for you. Or better yet, iOS-powered appliances in your home converse with the ones in your car, monitoring your location as you drive home from work, and when you're five minutes away they turn on the lights, set the A/C to 72 degrees, start the coffee pot, fire up the TV, fetch your pipe and slippers, and so forth. That's the house of the future that we've been promised for at least sixty years, and I can already hear the jaunty piano soundtrack in the accompanying concept video.

What's not so easy to picture is Apple willingly involving itself with any of that. Unless it plans on branching out into building its own refrigerators, dishwashers, HVAC units and toasters, Apple's iOS definitely isn't going to show up in home appliances. You're not going to see Frigidaire running a licensed build of iOS 6 on a touchscreen refrigerator door, nor is a Kenmore dishwasher going to have iOS powering a multitouch interface where you pick your rinse cycle then knock out a quick game of Jetpack Joyride. You know why not? Because Apple's never going to license iOS to other manufacturers, period. "Never say never," the saying goes, but I'm saying it anyway.

Just like with cars and watches, you have to follow the money trail to divine the level of interest Apple might have in the home appliance industry. And just like with cars and watches, I just don't see toaster ovens or thermostats as a lucrative market for Apple.

Though it's nice to play around with these Jetsons-like images of a fully Apple-powered home, the reality of Apple's 2012 is going to be far more "boring" than the iCar, the iWatch, and the iHouse. Here's what you can really expect from Apple in the year to come, roughly in the order you can expect to see them:

  • A faster iPad, possibly with a double-resolution display
  • Faster versions of its current Macs, and maybe a 15" MacBook Air
  • A faster iPhone
  • iOS 6, with evolutionary improvements to iOS 5
  • An A5 or A6-powered high definition version of the current Apple TV -- or, far less likely, an actual Apple TV set
  • Iterative improvements to Siri, iCloud, and iTunes services throughout the year

Yawn, right? Where's the disruptive product, the wave of the future, the thing that makes us feel like Star Trek's universe has come 300 years early? If it exists at all, it's probably deep within Apple's labs, in prototype form, and a hell of a lot more exciting than anything on Bajarin's list -- or mine.

On moderating expectations for Apple's 2012 originally appeared on TUAW - The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 03 Jan 2012 10:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

TUAW - The Unofficial Apple WeblogOn moderating expectations for Apple's 2012 originally appeared on TUAW - The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 03 Jan 2012 10:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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‘Red Friday’ to Bring Deals for Asian Apple Customers This Friday

Posted on by Eric Slivka.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Apple has begun informing customers in several of its Asian markets regarding this Friday's one-day shopping event in celebration of the Lunar New Year. Termed "Red Friday", the event is similar to Apple's Black Friday shopping deals in many areas of the world, where the company offers discounts on a number of different items including Macs, iPads, and iPods, as well as accessories.


According to 9to5Mac, the Red Friday deals will be offered through Apple's online stores in China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand and the Philippines. The deals will be also available in the company's brick-and-mortar stores in China and Hong Kong.

The event also falls during the same week that Apple celebrated the new year in Japan with its annual Lucky Bag promotion, allowing customers to buy bags containing mystery Apple and third-party products at a discounted price of $430.


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New Steve Jobs action figure is ultra-realistic, may not last long

Posted on by Andrew Wray.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Forbes reports that a new Steve Jobs action figure from Inicon is so realistic, the photos actually make it look real. The action figure comes with the following details.

  • one realistic ‘head sculpt;’
  • two pairs of glasses;
  • a ‘highly articulated body;’
  • three pairs of hands;
  • one tiny black turtleneck;
  • one tiny pair of blue jeans;

You can purchase the action figure from Inicon’s website, however, we’re not exactly sure how long Apple’s hordes of lawyers will let this one last — go grab it while it’s still up!

(Note: Inicon seems to be down due to the large amount of traffic they’ve seen)

Source: Inicon via Forbes



MobileX App Launcher For Jailbroken Apple TV [Video]

Posted on by iPhoneHacks.
Categories: Uncategorized.
iOS hackers Steven Troughton-Smith and Nick have made excellent progress in porting iOS apps to a jailbroken Apple TV. They first showed us how they have managed to get iOS apps running on a jailbroken Apple TV. They even figured out … Continue reading


Daily Apps: Silvester Adventure, 4th Grade Math: Splash Math Worksheets, Tailgate Cornhole, iLineup HD, Grid Lens

Posted on by Leanna Lofte.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Splash Math Worksheets, Tailgate Cornhole, iLineup HD, Grid Lens

Silvester Adventure: A platformer puzzle game which gameplay is centered on shadow manipulation. Character’s Shadow must be ensured safe for all the time as not to leave the Shadow Range. And throughout the game you will gain new shadow manipulation abilities(Shadow Skills) which you must use to progress through the game.

4th Grade Math: Splash Math Worksheets: With 140+ adaptive worksheets with virtually infinite problems spanning across 10 chapters, Splash Math Grade 4 covers the entire 4th grade curriculum.

Tailgate Cornhole: The first cornhole game for iOS that is made with Sports Fans in mind! The toss system has been designed from the ground up to make it the most fun and easy to control cornhole game on iOS.

iLineup HD: Designed for all baseball and softball players, coaches, managers, and lovers of the game. It enables you to quickly create a player lineup, letting you enter position, batting order, player numbers, and substitutions.

Grid Lens: You can take photos in each frame split by grid lines to create your own story. It allows you to capture every single moment you don’t want to miss.

Any other big app or game releases or updates today?

Have an app you’d love to see featured on TiPb? Email us at iosapps@tipb.com, tell us about your app (include an iTunes link), and we’ll take a look.



Rumor: Apple to release budget iPad starting at $299

Posted on by Andrew Wray.
Categories: Uncategorized.

Hit or miss rumor site Digitimes has reported that Apple may plan on introducing a low-end iPad 2 with a starting price of around $299 after the next-generation iPad hits the market.

Sources from Apple’s supply chain have claimed that there will be two versions of the new iPad, one targeting the high-end segment and the other the mid-range. Digitimes Research believe the two new iPad models will both be equipped the A6 processor with high-end model coming with a high resolution panel (2048×1536) and the mid-tier model featuring the same grade of panel as iPad 2 (1024×768).

Digitimes can be as accurate as your average coin toss, but with the Kindle Fire and other, lower-end tablets now on the market, Apple could consider doing what they’ve done with the iPhone for years — keeping the previous year’s model around at a reduced price to choke the air out of the budget players. iPhones come with steep carrier subsidies, however, and there’s no telling if Apple could — or would be willing to — make even a previous year’s iPad at a low enough cost to both match Kindle-style competitors and still keep Apple’s margins where they need to be.

A reduced price iPad 2-style device does make more sense than the 7-inch iPad Digitimes has also been peddling lately.

Source: Digitimes



New Year’s Resolution: Review your social network privacy settings

Posted on by Rene Ritchie.
Categories: Uncategorized.

What better New Year’s resolution to start with than to check out all your in-app privacy settings, especially where Google, Facebook, Twitter and other social networks are concerned? We know how it goes; you get a shiny new iPhone or iPad app and you just want to use it so you log in through Twitter of Facebook or Google because it’s easy, quickly tap through all the set up pages, granting who knows what permissions and for how long, and then forget about it the moment the next shiny app comes along.

MyPermissions.org thinks you should take a few moments to review your settings, revoke or reduce access for those apps that no longer need full, free access to your personal, sometimes private data, and get 2012 off on a saner, more socially secure start.

(I just did mine and I was startled how many old apps still had access to my stuff.)

Source: MyPermission.org



Browser Speed Test: Apple’s iPhone 4S Vs. Nokia Lumia 800 Vs. iPhone 4

Posted on by iPhoneHacks.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Back in April 2011, Joe Belfiore, Director of the Windows Phone program compared the performance of Internet Explorer 9 mobile with Mobile Safari on iPhone 4 and Android browser on Samsung’s Nexus S by running HTML5 speed reading demo. In that test, Internet … Continue reading


Pull to Dismiss: Jailbreak Tweak Allows You to Easily Dismiss iPhone’s Keyboard

Posted on by iPhoneHacks.
Categories: Uncategorized.
Ryan Petrich - developer of popular jalbreak apps like ProSwitcher, Rotation Inhibitor, DeepEnd, Clippy, DisplayOut etc. has released another useful jailbreak tweak called “Pull to Dismiss“. Here’s a brief description of the jailbreak tweak from Cydia: Dismiss keyboard by scrolling. In apps and views where a … Continue reading


Gympact iPhone app offers cash rewards to gym-goers, penalizes inattendance

Posted on by Brad Molen.
Categories: Uncategorized.
We know, it's the new year and you just made a resolution to start going to the gym regularly... for the fifth year in a row. But you really mean it this time, don't you? There's an intriguing way to make sure you stay motivated throughout 2012 -- the almighty dollar. And we're not just talking gym memberships, either, though you'll probably need one: an iPhone app called GymPact offers cash rewards if you honor your weekly fitness commitment and makes you cough up some of our own hard-earned money if you slack off. Here's how it works: you first make a pact on how many days you'll go to the gym each week (minimum of one day per week) and how much you'll fork out if you miss, with the minimum penalty set at five bucks for each day you miss. If you have to pay, that money gets taken out of your credit card and goes straight into a community pot, which then gets divided up and doled out to everyone who honored their weekly commitment.

How does the app know when you've stayed true to your vow? It's easy enough: you have to check-in to the gym using the app and stay for at least 30 minutes in order for your visit to count. The negative motivation seems to be working so far: according to GymPact, the startup saw a success rate of 90 percent in its six-month Boston-area trial. Unfortunately, iOS is the only platform the program is currently available on, but the company says it's working on an HTML5 web app that would allow check-ins from any smartphone. Now, if only there was an app to keep us from going to the Drive-Thru immediately after we leave the gym...

Gympact iPhone app offers cash rewards to gym-goers, penalizes inattendance originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 03 Jan 2012 05:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rumor: Apple Planning to Hold Media Event at The End of This Month That Will Focus On Publishing And iBooks

Posted on by iPhoneHacks.
Categories: Uncategorized.
AllThingsD reports that Apple is planning to hold a media event at the end of this month. AllThingsD claims that based on their sources, Apple is planning to make some media related announcement rather than launch iPad 3 or the … Continue reading