Looking for great alternatives to Mobile Safari, I have stumbled upon a lot browsers for the iPad. Some of them are really nice, like Grazing and Browser+; some them are the result of strange experiments gone terribly wrong, like Super Prober. Overall, the trend amongst developers seem to be that of trying to reinvent Safari by adding features over features that, without good software engineering and quality control, may end up cluttering an app, making everything barely usable. It happened with many browsers I have tested so far. Read more
Posts tagged with "iPad"
Tapu: iPad Browser That Looks Like Chrome, Plugs Into Facebook
Ions: Impressive Particle Visualizer for iPad
Soon after the iPad came out and Apple launched an App Store specifically meant for it, an app quickly jumped to first position of the charts: Uzu. The app, launched as free and eventually priced at $1.99, is a neat particle visualizer that supports multitouch input and allows you to create patterns with your fingers. Check our demo video here if you missed.
Ions, developed by Douglas Applewhite and available in App Store at $0.99, is an equally impressive particle visualizer that, unlike Uzu, gives you more control over the particles of light moving on screen. In fact, Ions might just be the most powerful and technically advanced particle visualizer we’ve seen on the iOS platform. The app comes with different particle light styles that you can switch at any time; you can control gravity with a slider or de-activate it from a popup menu; most of all, you can place emitters and negative fields on screen to control the movement of particles, which can go up to 20,000. Everything runs at 60fps and I haven’t noticed a single slowdown in my tests. Even with the maximum amount of emitters and fields particle were still running smoothly and fast.
You can also control the amount of particles released by an emitter, adjust the orientation and speed of the flow. Once you’ve achieved an interesting layout, you can save it and load it later to show it to your friends.
Go download Ions here. Demo video after the break. Really impressive. Read more
Pixelsync Transfers Photos Between Aperture and iPad
Professional photographers who own an iPad and have seen that lightweight photo editing is possible on the tablet have been asking for a portable version of Apple’s Aperture software for quite some time now. While there’s no evidence that Apple is working on a native iPad version of Aperture with focus on the OS X audience and the Mac App Store (where Aperture is being sold at a nice discounted price), third-party developers have set out to create alternatives to the most popular “pro” Apple apps like Final Cut and, indeed, Aperture.
Pixelsync, previously known as “Tagalicious”, is a new app by developer Bart Jacobs that can sync Aperture photos between the iPad and the Mac. With a minimal and elegant interface (that’s dramatically improved since the first version of the app which, frankly, was quite ugly) that resembles the default Photos app, Pixelsync needs to communicate with a “helper” software users will have to install on their OS X machine running Aperture. Pixelsync Helper will than make it possible for the iPad app to fetch photos from the desktop application.
In Pixelsync for iPad you can’t edit photos, but you can play around with the metadata. Put simply, you can rate photos and assign color labels. Once projects and / or albums have been imported, you can edit and organize these data on the iPad and then sync back to Aperture. It all happens wirelessly with no USB cable required.
At $5.99 in the App Store, Pixelsync might be a little too pricey; still, Aperture users who have been looking for a lightweight iPad companion should give it a try.
AT&T Q4 Earnings: 4.1 Million iPhone Activations and 442,000 iPads & Tablets
US-based carrier AT&T has announced its quarterly results for Q4 2010, and there are some interesting numbers in there worth to be considered. The company reported 4.1 million iPhone activations in Q4, the last quarter as the exclusive iPhone carrier in the United States. On February 10, Verizon Wireless will begin selling a CDMA version of the iPhone 4, with pre-order sales starting February 3rd.
Mentioning “continued expansion in new wireless growth areas”, AT&T also announced they added 1.5 million “connected devices” including 442,000 iPads and Android tablets. AT&T started selling the iPad WiFi + 3G model in its retail stores on October 28th, 2010.
AT&T also reported 9.9% growth in wireless revenues and consolidated revenues of $31.4 billion in the fourth quarter. Full press releases embedded below. Read more
Netflix: More Viewing Hours on Apple TVs Than iPads
In today’s earnings release, movie streaming service Netflix has announced that viewing hours on Apple TV have surpassed those through the iPad. What’s interesting is that the Apple TV was released in September 2010 and has sold less than two million units since then; the iPad, on the other hand, was released in April and has sold almost 15 million units.
It has to be considered, though, that Netflix makes more sense on a TV’s big screen than a tablet’s, and Apple implemented a native Netflix front-end on the second-gen Apple TV. The iPad has access to Netflix through an app that has to be downloaded manually from the App Store.
In spite of the iPad’s bigger numbers, people still like to watch movies on their TVs, apparently. Perhaps the iPad is more meant for “web video”, rather than just movies. [TiPB via Yahoo]
“Cat Piano” App for iPad Really Sounds Like Katy Perry
You would think developers have something better to do than creating piano apps for the iPad that sound like cats. Well it turns out, no: someone did. In the video embedded below, an adventurous iPad user has recreated Katy Perry’s “Teenage Dream” using only music apps for the tablet, including Cat Piano.
The result, gentlemen, is quite surprising. Read more
#MacStoriesDeals - Wednesday
MacWorld has begun! Here’s today’s deals on iOS, Mac, and Mac App Store apps that are on sale for a limited time, so get ‘em while they’re hot! Read more
Assero Defender And Protector Frontpacks For iPad
At only one and a half pounds, you’d think the iPad would be fine on its own being slipped in and out of a messenger bag. If the iPad isn’t portable enough for your day job (or you’re ultra-paranoid about pickpockets), Assero has slimmed down a backpack so you can wear it over your chest. Opening out and presenting the iPad as a typing surface, they’re designed to be mobile “offices” where you can quickly access your most used gadgets and accessories. Of the two models, the Protector is a slim version at $89.99 that can be worn underneath clothes (the aluminum iPad would make for good body armor), and the Defender is a more expensive workhorse that has more pouches and pockets for $129.99. You can preorder the cases at Assero’s landing page, but I can’t say I’m jumping at the opportunity to actually get one.
[via CNET]
Kickstarter Project: Adonit WRITER
Kickstarter is the largest funding platform for creative projects in the world. They have helped projects like the TikTok+LunaTik watch kit for iPod Nano and the Glif tripod mount / stand for iPhone. Today, we thought we would show you a project that’s aimed at all of our hearts, the iPad.
Adonit has started a project via Kickstarter for their product WRITER, an iPad case + keyboard. Adonit is trying to raise $10,000 to get this project funded by February 3 and currently has over $7,000 (US). Read more