Create your own Custom iPhone Skin

A few days ago, I was contacted by a guy at UniqueSkins.com who asked me if I'd like to become an affiliate of his site. I receive some of these inquiries several times a week and most of the time, I don't follow through because the product they sell has nothing to do with the iPhone or iPod Touch. But this time, 2 things got my attention: 1. the product seemed original to me; and 2. he offered to give me free samples. Alright, I'll admit that the "free samples" really caught my attention ;-)

So I decided to look into the product by going to Unique Skins' website and found the concept really cool. Basically, Unique Skins offers a simple and cheap way for you to create your own skin for your iPhone. You can get your custom iPhone skin for about $7. You can also create skins for your iPhone dock. They don't only make custom skins for iPhone; they make skins for pretty much any type of phone you can think of, as well as laptops, gaming consoles, MP3 players. They even make skins for bluetooth headsets!

Here is how it works:

Choose your device Click on "Design Now". It then brings up their online skin creator. At this point, you can either choose from a library of images or, that's where it gets interesting, you can choose to upload your own image. Once your image is uploaded, you can move it around, rotate it, and you can even add text. When you're done creating, you can preview your custom skin and then add it to the cart.

Today I received my 2 skins and I was positively surprised by the great quality of the printing. Given that I had used low quality images to create my custom skin, I expected a print out all pixelized. Not at all.

I couldn't wait any longer, I decided to stick one of them on my lovely iPhone.

At first, I was a little scared that I wouldn't be able to install the skin without making a few air bubbles. I was also worried that I would lose my nerves on this mini project. I have very little patience and I am usually not good at doing things with my hands (although my girlfriend would argue this, hehe ;-).

I decided to start by the back of the phone as I thought it would be the easier part. I removed the sticky skin from the sheet and started applying it to the top left of the phone, right by the camera lense. Once this part was done, I moved toward the top right, making sure to remove the little air bubbles that I feared so much. In no time, the top of the phone was done. I then started to stick the rest of the skin, going all the way to the bottom of the phone, while still making sure no air bubble would sneak in.

Almost done! Oh NOOOOOO! There is this tiny bubble that I forgot to remove. You can barely see it but I'm a neat freak; I like things to be perfect. I removed what I had done and started over again until the back was perfectly done. It took me about 3-4 minutes from the time I removed the sticky skin from the sheet to the time I sat back and proudly looked at the hip skin on the back of my iPhone.

Now, the hardest part of the job; the front of the phone. I had a bad feeling about this from start, especially because of the light and proximity sensors (you can barely see them right next to the phone speaker (not speakerphone) but if you cover them, you're screwed as your iPhone won't be able to tell how lit it is around you or whether your ear is against the phone or not.

So again, I decided to start with the top of the phone, as it would be the hardest part. I did my best to apply the skin and it almost looks ok but I was not satisfied with it at all. It actually makes my iPhone look a little ghetto. What drove me nuts was the sideline of the screen that was not straight. I guess most people would have been satisfied with the result but again, I'm a neat freak so I simply decided to completely remove the skin from the front of my iPhone. I kept the back though, as I think it looks sick!

To sum up, I'd say Unique Skins is a great, inexpensive way to customize your iPhone with your own design. $7 + $3 for shipping is very affordable for this product. When creating my iPhone skins, I uploaded low resolution images but they turned out really good once printed. The set up was pretty easy although I would have expected them to send me a quick "how to" guide, as well as a tool to make sure you are correctly removing the air bubbles. But for this price, you can't expect much and you can't really go wrong. If I had had to pay for it, would have I done it? Yes, I most likely would have bought a cute custom iPhone skin for my girlfriend's phone and one for me.

Web Apps Rock!

A lot of talk has been centered around the App store and Jailbreak Apps but what i find really exciting is the web apps that are being designed and formatted for the iPhone/iTouch. No installation, no jailbreaking, no disk space is necessary.  And with the iPhone's/iTouch's ability to store a bookmark on the Home Screen, these apps can appear and be accessed just like any other app.

There are several different ways to locate web apps.  First, Apple has a web page that allows people to register their web apps.  I highly recommend those with RSS readers subscribe to this feed.   Some very cool apps are showing up.  Another cool way of seeing these web apps are using the Web Apps [iTunes Link] application that you can download from the Itunes App Store. It allows you to create a list of favorites and navigate to them easily (if you don't want to have a direct bookmark icon on your desktop) and lets you see what is out and try out the apps on your iphone.

Some of these apps are just web pages reformatted for you iPhone/iTouch, but some of them really take advantage of the IPhone GUI and technology.   One that caught my eye yesterday is the Dominos Pizza Tracker.  According to the Apple page "The Domino’s Pizza Tracker takes a phone number as input and connects to Domino’s Pizza Tracker XML backend to return information regarding your order, including time of creation, cooking, and delivery status. "  I haven't tried it yet, but i think i'll be having Pizza tonight!

iPhoneBrowser

I wrote in the past about iPhoneBrowser, this neat little piece of software that allows you to browse and manipulate your iPhone files without jailbreaking it. After updating to 2.0, iPhoneBrowser didn't work anymore so I kinda forgot about it until today.

I checked the Google Code page of iPhoneBrowser and realized it was recently updated so I decided to download it again. Boy, it's as good as ever! I like iPhoneBrowser for one good reason: it's much faster than SSH. When using SSH, you have to turn on SSH on your iPhone and open WinSCP on your PC whereas you just need to open iPhoneBrowser and plug in your iPhone to access your files when using iPhoneBrowser. Furthermore, downloading a large file from the iPhone to your computer is much faster using iPhoneBrowser too as it transfers the file through the USB port of your computer. One thing SSH does that iPhoneBrowser doesn't is let you change the file properties. For example, if you want to set different properties for a file, you will have to use SSH. Not a big deal as I personally don't touch file properties very often.

So what can you do with iPhoneBrowser?

drag and drop uploading to our phone automatic and manual backups of files on your phone previews of text and picture files and very cool icons create "favorite" path to your most used locations

Hi, my name is Alicia

Hi, My name is Alicia and starting today I am going to start to contribute some posts to this blog. I am an information architect at a pharmaceutical company by day and gadget girl by night. I have been addicted to gadgets since i was a little girl and i saw my first Radio Shack. Sometimes I can get a little out of hand as when I decided everyone in my family (all five of us) needed a kindle. When I recently called Amazon on the phone, the support person said to me "Hey, your that family with five kindles". And it doesn't stop there. I have been hacking successfully and unsuccessfully for years. I am always the first one to but on the new firmware, to pay the most for the bleeding edge technology (Paid almost $1000 for my Tivo 7 years ago), and to have to explain to my husband why the X10 components I installed only work half of the time.

I am really excited about where we are headed with this new integrated web way of looking at the world. I think that combining the concept of "internet everywhere" with a GPS, accelerometer and a phone will completely change the way we interact with information and our world. I think the possibilities are endless.

Each day when I look at what people are building for this new framework, I am blown away at the ingenuity and creativity. Even when the developer's don't get it right the first time, I still have to say to myself "why didn't i think of that?"

I hope to bring some of gadget lust and awe to this blog. Talk to you soon.

Tap To Unlock slider replacement

I really like the User Interface of the iPhone. It is very simple, intuitive, in other words, it is very user friendly. When I first got my iPhone over a year ago, simple things about the UI were amazing me. One of them was the "slide to unlock" feature. How cool is that that you can access the springboard by the slide of a finger!

Quickly, this "slide to unlock" thing started to annoy me for one single reason: it didn't work all the time. Well, it actually works all the time but sometimes my finger doesn't starts sliding where it should, forcing me to repeat the gesture to get it to work.

I had a good surprise a couple days ago while browsing the apps available in Cydia. I cam across this "Tap To Unlock" application that works with Winterboard. I Installed it and it works great. Now instead of sliding my finger across the screen, I can access the springboard by just taping it.

Tether your iPhone with PDAnet

[digg-me]According to PhoneScoop, "tethering is connecting your phone to a laptop or similar data device using a data cable, usually for the purpose of connecting to the Internet on the laptop, via the phone's wireless connection to the cell phone network. Carriers usually charge more money for accessing the Internet via tethering, as opposed to on the phone itself. Sometimes this is enforced via technology in the phone, although often it is simply the honor system and not strictly enforced".

In our case, AT&T clearly doesn't want you to tether your iPhone. Strangely, they don't even have such a plan you could subscribe to in order to use your iPhone as a modem. So to make it clear, tethering your iPhone is against AT&T Terms Of Services.

Quick interview of Jeff Smith, CEO and cofounder of Smule

Smule? That rings a bell? I posted about their Sonic Lighter application last week and added a cool video that shows you Sonic Lighter in action. At the time, I said I wouldn't spend $.99 in their application. After asking a few questions to Smule's CEO Jeff Smith, I still wouldn't put a dime in this app, but at least now I understand what's cool about it. Oh yeah, it's a pretty cool app...

How do you use Sonic Lighter?

It's pretty simple. To ignite, strike the flints or get a light from another phone nearby. Tilt/touch to play with the flame. Blow the base of the phone to extinguish the flame, or blow gently to simply make the flame dance. Double-tap a burning flame to see a real-time view of the World and who has ignited.

Why did you develop this application?

We developed the application with a few purposes in mind.

First, we saw an opportunity to build a new network, a network based on physical relationship Vs virtual relationships. It's not that we dislike Facebook. It's just that we're skeptical of whether someone really has 1,000 friends. In the end, we value human contact, and our network is very human. If you look on our site, you can see where people all over the world are igniting their flames. And so we feel more human connecting to these people. Moreover, you'll see new versions of the Sonic Lighter product that allow you to track your own network, but these are people you met directly (not virtually) and offered a light.

Second, we think that the iPhone is an ideal platform for audio, and yet virtually all of the audio today on the iPhone is static. We've developed a new audio platform, Chip, based on the Chuck audio language that came out of our co-founder, Dr. Ge Wang's research at Princeton. It is on top of this audio platform that we have constructed the Sonic Modem (allowing in the Sonic Lighter ignitions across phones), real-time synthesized sounds that interact directly with your gestures, as well as our new wind model (the ability to detect wind against a mic so you can blow out a flame, for example).

We are just getting started here, and you should expect some unique and expressive application content from us, allowing people to connect with one another in new ways.

Finally, we are simply curious. We want to explore what is possible on this amazing new platform. Never before have we seen multi-touch, GPS, crisp processing, a GPU for high quality graphics, tilt, and real-time audio in the palm of your hand. This iPhone platform, for all the hype, is frankly more profound than we even contemplate now.

There seems to be 1,000 lighter applications in the App Store, why would I pay for Sonic Lighter when I can have another lighter app for free? And what does make Sonic Lighter different from other lighter apps available in the app store?

Well, apparently people are. We've been a top-5 application in France, Belgium, Japan, Italy, Denmark, etc. Our position in the U.S store, in spite of the 'alternatives', seems to continue to grow. Moreover, if you look at the current ignition map (in the product on our web site), you see actual real-time data on ignitions around the world. I noticed an ignition yesterday in the arctic circle. We checked the data base and confirmed, in fact, we saw three ignitions from this location. An offshore oil platform or cruise-ship was our guess. We've already seen over 18K ignitions in the past 24 hours across the globe.

But to your question, our product is not really a lighter. Yes, you ignite a flame, interact with it by touching, pinch it to expand or contract it, tilt it to fry the side of your phone. But, uniquely and through our audio engine, you can blow out the flame with wind. And you can ignite a lighter on another phone over our Sonic Modem. Moreover, through your ignitions on your phone and others, you can join the new Sonic Network, now graphically displayed on our globe.

What's next for Smule? Any app development?

You'll see three new applications from Smule in the next three weeks. Stay tuned.

Anything relevant about you that might interest my readers?

Yes. I'm pursuing a Phd in computer music at Stanford. Our co-founder and CTO, Ge Wang, is an assistant professor of computer music at Stanford and the author of Chuck, the leading audio programming platform. Ge recently created the Stanford Laptop Orchestra. And if you have time, I'd encourage you to chat with or even meet Dr. Wang. He really has passion for the new world of audio on the iPhone.

Apple loosens their grip on China

I just read about Apple's new change in China, they are now offering unlocked phones there. The prices look like this:

HK$5,500 (≈ US$700) = 8GB model

HK$6,200 (≈ US$800) = 16GB

Who knows what the grey market might start selling now :) Have a nice autumn break for those of you who can still enjoy it.

News from the DevTeam

How much do you love the DevTeam? These guys are working day and night so you don't have to rely on Apple to provide you with great iPhone applications. I believe I use more jailbroken applications than I actually use "Apple approved" apps. All this thanks to the DevTeam.

Today, the DevTeam updated us on the status of their work.

While we continue working on the two current remaining challenges from Apple (the iPhone 3G soft unlock and iPod Touch 2G jailbreak…see the end of this post), we’re also watching the latest beta releases from Apple.

The first beta 2.2 from Apple reveals a few things:

They’re continuing with their ski-resort theme;  Version 2.2 is nicknamed TImberline. They’ve gone back to using expiry dates.  The first 2.2 beta is due to expire on November 30, 2008.  They stopped using expiry dates about halfway through the 2.1 betas, but for some reason they’ve started using them again. Version 2.2 is still vulnerable to pwnage and quickpwn on everything but iPod Touch 2G.

To demonstrate point #3, here’s the non-AppStore application Terminal.app running on 2.2, showing the kernel build information.

Hardware already vulnerable to pwnage remains vulnerable in version 2.2.

Regarding the two current challenges:  the 3G iPhone soft unlock and iPod Touch 2G jailbreak are still relatively new challenges (compare them with the timeframe of the iPhone challenges last year).  We’re making slow advances on both fronts, but it’s not the sort of thing that can be easily described in a blog like this.

But, to maybe show how interlinked these challenges are, this weekend we’ll be trying some hardware based ideas on the iPod Touch 2G jailbreak :)

As you can read, they are still working of this long-awaited iPhone 3G unlock. I am a "legit" AT&T customer so I don't care much about the unlock for myself, but I can't wait for them succeed as it will help thousands, if not more.

Keep up the good job DevTeam.

Have you seen me before?

Hi everyone reading this blog. My name is Daniel Grini Brenden and i live in Norway. The blog owner, Sebastien was kind enough to let me inside his blog. I'll start by introducing myself in this post. If you've ever seen the aliases SpecialForce, SpecialStyrke then you have probably crossed my path. It would be fun to hav a comment or two if it has happend. I'm also availbale at http://digg.com/users/SpecialStyrke for those of you that share some of my computer passion. For now i have an iPhone 2G running firmware 2.1 with a little help from QuickPwn. if any novices need help with that i'm availbale, just write to me in the comments.

When it comes to why i want to write here is a good question. It's a very good way to let future job hirers see that i can manage writing well as i am for now only 15 and wish to educate myself in to an Internet, communications and technology administrator. So i have much time left before i achieve my goal. Anyways i''ll try to guide both novice and advanced users into the dangerous iphone hacking jungle in no time so you wont need to find news yourself.

Stay Tuned Everyone!

Signed Daniel Brenden

26 reasons why the iPhone sucks

I came across this funny post on BoingBoing; basically it's a top 10 of the top 10 iPhone flaws. I figured I'd spin this post and make a larger list of everything that sucks about the iPhone. Hey, don't worry, I still love my iPhone!

List is made in no special order.

Web apps cannot download, upload or store data Web pages cannot be saved for offline viewing Cannot browse iPhone's folders by any means No Flash No Java Weak speaker Two-year commitment required with carrier Carrier-locked No hardware keyboard No voice dialling No Bluetooth stereo Does not operate in landscape mode in all applications Delay for new voicemail notification No full-screen view in browser; large button strip always present Crap camera No Cut and Paste Stocks sucks Notes sucks Can't replace battery No MMS Crap GPS Terrible battery life No webcam Adding contacts is annoying No TV No tethering allowed

Do you have anything to add to this list?

Want to write for iPhone Download Blog? I’m hiring!

As some of you may already know, I am searching for high quality writers to help me around at iPhone Download Blog. Duties will obviously include blogging about the iPhone, reviewing apps, posting news, talking about iPhone events, and giving tips on how to get the most off the iPhone. If you know about the iPhone and can spend a few minutes everyday writing good posts about your favorite device, you're the man/girl I am looking for!

DISCLAIMER: THIS IS NOT A JOB OFFER

Qualifications to join me:

You have to be very knowledgeable about the iPhone - you must know your way around the phone like no one else. You should be able to jailbreak and/or unlock your iPhone and talk about it. You must wish you were an iPhone - no, this is a bad joke. You must know about WordPress - if you don't, go to wordpress.com and sign up for a free account and play around for a bit. You'll see it's super easy to use. You must be willing to work for free - yes, you heard me! I am not making money from this blog (except for the $10/month I make from Google Ads = pathetic!). You will most likely write a few posts everyday and you will gain recognition from that, but that's it. If companies offer you products to review, you may keep the product. You must be original! I am not looking for reporters; I am looking for bloggers = people who can talk shit about Apple if they feel like it. I want someone who will write with his/her guts, not just copy/paste a post from another iPhone-related blog. You must provide me a couple example of your iPhone writing skills.

The iPhone Download Blog is growing fast! I get about 2,500 8,000 visits per day. It's still not quite the traffic TechCrunch gets, but we're getting there ;-) Seriously, we get more and more traffic everyday and we need to satisfy our readers.

I am an equal opportunity blogger; so whether you're rich, poor, black, red, green, if you have a penis AND a vagina (I think that's weird but whatever, that's cool with me), if you hate Steve Jobs as much as I do, if you vote McCain or Obama, or if you're none of the above and still want to write about the iPhone, hit me up.

Thanks!

Sebastien

UPDATE: Alicia and Cody joined me. It's now 3 of us to blog here about the iPhone. The more the merrier... Come join us!