Review

The Best Free iPhone Weather App

The weather app that comes with your iPhone is usable, but it doesn't provide much information.  Sometimes an icon doesn't tell you exactly what you can expect weather-wise.  Heading into these autumn and, eventually, winter months we'll need more information about the weather.

Even with the advent of the App Store, there hasn't been a free weather app that just knocked my socks off.  Perhaps I am a bit tougher to please than the average iPhone user because I have been a weather producer at the television station I work at.

Well, the must-have free weather app is finally here and it's no surprise that it was created by The Weather Channel [iTunes link].  It features the current conditions, an hourly forecast, a 36-hour forecast and a 10-day forecast.  I really like the hourly forecast.  Today, I see that the rain is going to start to pick up at around 6 p.m.  Very useful.

The "Explore Map" option (pictured, above) features doppler radar, which shows you exactly where it is raining, snowing or both.  Another extremely useful feature.

There's also an updated video of the forecast for the major city near your area.  And finally, there's a "Severe Weather Alerts" tab.  "The Weather Channel" can detect your location using your GPS if you allow it.

So, if you haven't bought a full-featured weather app already, get "The Weather Channel."  It's free, and I highly recommend it.

gFlash+ iPhone Flash Card Solution Turns more than Cards

Well, since I haven't quite figured out how to make money being a gadget nerd, I'm forced to keep my day job. Unfortunately for me, that day job requires that I be up to date on all state-required licenses, and wouldn't you know it, its time for renewal. So with a week or so before exam date, I'm given study material and some time off.

"I'm screwed," I thought, staring at the 300 page study guide with intimidation. After about half an hour of highlighting the same sentence over and over, my trusty iPhone came to the rescue. To the App Store! I knew I had come across a flash card application on there that might be just what I needed to keep focused. Sure enough, gWhiz mobile's gFlash+ [iTunes Link] showed up in my search and better yet, was available for free.

The application is about as simple as it gets. It comes with 3 sample topics, showing off the app's ability to offer flash cards in standard Q&A form, True or False form, and even multiple choice. After browsing the small catalog of flash card topics, it was obvious I was going to have to make my own. This is also fairly simple, as long as you have some sort of google account (iGoogle, Gmail, documents, etc.) because the program depends upon google documents' spreadsheet application. Here you put your question in column A, and your answer directly beside it in column B, and this will make up the front and back of your flash card.

After making all your flash cards, you'll need to download them onto your iPhone. I know it seems like I'm being repetitive but this, too, is extremely simple. From the main menu you choose the 'download your own data' option, and after a quick google sign in (you'll only have to do this once), you're looking at all downloadable data in your google documents folder. Of course, you'll select the spreadsheet you just devised, and it'll take a second to download.

I myself made about 100 flash cards of vocabulary words and definitions. The first card shows up with the word, and after I answer, I touch the card to turn it over and reveal the correct answer. The program does keep track of your progress by allowing you to press a check mark or an x depending on if you got the questions right or not. It is optional for you to have your total correct answers display at the top of the screen.

Over all this program is extremely functional and easy to use, it definitely served its purpose. I can study anywhere, anytime I want. I can do a few vocab words, or the whole 100, it's fantastic. As an iPhone application, though, it's held to high standards. The GUI could be dressed up a bit, and if anyone from gWhiz is listening, how about a full screen view, with actual note card backgrounds. And as long as we're throwing out ideas here, how about voice recognition ability that can tell if you answered correctly or not. Well, for now, let's just work on making this software more reliable.

Anyone who has read my reviews in the past, knows how much I hate crashing, and this one tended to do it more than I wanted it to. But gFlash+ is nonetheless great at what it does, and it has helped me out tremendously, being able to take my studying with me wherever I go. A note should also be made that this software is also available for blackberry/treo phones, and while not as cool as the 3G, it enables my co workers to download my license exam review from the gWhiz website for their cell phones. Guess who the most popular guy at the office is?

P.S.

Another hi tech studying tip is recording yourself reading material you have to study/remember with a recording app on your iPhone. Now when you go to sleep tonight, pop in your head phones, and put the recording you made earlier on loop. I'm not promising you'll wake up in the morning with a head full of knowledge, but at least you are increasing your exposure to the material. Thank you, thank you, hold your applause. ;op

A look at Audio Notes

There are many folks and companies who thought of developing voice recorders for iPhone ages back. The evidence being a vast array of voice recorders available on iTunes App Store and we are glad that developers are providing us with some exceptional voice recording tools right on our iPhone.

Ever since I got my iPhone I have tried a bunch of audio recorders. Until recently the one which I loved the most was Newpea Audio Recorder mainly because of its ease of use and the ability to save files in mp3/mp4 format. By clicking on a button inside the application one can start recording and once the recording is done, the user can click on the file either to playback, rename or delete the file. Sounds pretty neat right, and you get this at a price of $9.99.

I was quite happy with the application but wished it had the option of recording right from the moment the application was launched and also the ability to write short notes for every recording so that I could better organize and find the right audio files at the right time without having to make much effort. Then again on second thoughts I felt I was just hoping against hopes and that developers wouldn’t care a damn about selected few like me demanding these features.

But Surprise! Surprise! On 31st October, a brilliant application called Audio Notes [iTunes Link] was released in the App Store. It not alone puts a check on two of the items on my wish-list (1. Immediate recording on launch; and 2. Short notes for the recorded audio) but also released a few other new and very useful features.

It brought out an option of prioritizing notes by assigning different colors to each of them. Moreover, an alert system is provided where you can set the date and time so that you are reminded about your notes when they matter the most. (The user is however alerted only after launching the app, wish there was a mechanism by which the application could act as an alarm and buzz the user to remind him to check the note).

Now the icing on the cake: Using this application you can directly export your recorded audio notes to the PC using WiFi via FTP in order to make a permanent backup of the same on your computer or upload them onto net. All in all, the application works like a charm and provides great value for money. At $2.99, its not at all expensive given the fact that it can bail you out of your work woes!

Your iPhone Can Quench Your Thirst For Words

Gone are the days when people went through the tedious process of looking up for a word on a bound dictionary. Electronic dictionaries on PC made the process easier but as usual we wanted more – an anytime, anywhere, instantaneous access to digital dictionaries. Some thought this was just another unreasonable whim of mankind. But as they say "whims and fancies can be a path to creativity and success". This was proved with the creation of Mobile Dictionaries, its strongest manifestation being iPhone dictionaries.

Many dictionary-related apps have been covered in this blog so far but let me give you an update on WordBook [iTunes Link], an already excellent app which has gone par excellence with the release of its latest 2.0 version. With its rich 150,000 entries you would be scanning through an 1,800 page equivalent content in a jiffy. That's brilliant, but even its previous 1.1 version had the same feature. So there isn't anything fresh on that front. However, a new feature in the latest version has the power to give pronunciations and origin of words along with their definition.

Now let's not get ahead of ourselves and shower praises since there are many dictionary applications out there providing these features. So what is it that sets this dictionary really apart? Is it the anagram window which boasts of an ability to search words whose spelling the user partly knows/remembers? Well not entirely. So what’s cooking?

Look closely at the words DICTIONARY, LINKS, THESAURUS and WEB towards the right hand side of the image above. These are not just mere words but they are links to a one stop destination to all that you could ask off a dictionary.

By default the Dictionary link is active which gives you the pronunciation, definition, and origin of a searched word. Now comes the useful part you can click on LINKS to get the synonym, antonym and attribute of the word. Furthermore, you can click on THESAURUS which gives synonyms in different forms i.e. adjective, noun and verb. If this weren't enough you can click on WEB so that wordbook directly looks up on the internet to retrieve information on the word you have searched. You can even customize and set your own favorite dictionary site to be searched by wordbook.

This phenomenal linkage of thousands of words equips you with not alone the definition of a word but also provides you with a series of similar words which can be used in different forms and contexts all from one single window. Yeah that’s true a one window access to all your wordy needs. So go ahead and "Quench your thirst for words" through WordBook [iTunes Link] that you can download from the App Store for $7.99.

Pixelpipe – Media Gateway: Review

Since I bought the iPhone 3G back in July, one of the features I have been using consistently is photo geotagging.  Immediately, I downloaded AirMe [iTunes link] from the App Store.  AirMe is what I use to judge all other photo uploading apps.  You can use AirMe to take a picture and it automatically uploads it to one of three sites: Facebook, Flickr or Picasa.  AirMe doesn't have a multitude of features, but what it can do it does well.

This weekend I saw Pixelpipe - Media Gateway [iTunes link] in the App Store.  What intrigued me about this app is that you can upload your iPhone photos to multiple sites at the same time, unlike AirMe which is limited to one site.  Pixelpipe supports a mind-boggling 39 photo/video sharing sites, 10 blogging sites, e-mail and FTP.  And, like AirMe, Pixelpipe is free.  So, how could you go wrong with an app that does so much?  Unfortunately, it is the little things that matter most.

Adding websites to upload to is quite simple.  Each site is called a "destination."  I added box.net, Flickr, Picasa, TwitPic, Blogger and Facebook.  One minor point is that the settings for Pixelpipe are changed within Safari, which I find unusual.  Settings for most apps are changed within the native app.

One big mistake I made is uploading all of my photos on my iPhone to Pixelpipe and then uploading them all to my destination sites.  I would suggest NOT hitting the "Upload All" button unless that's what you really want to do.

The camera portion of Pixelpipe is one of its weakest points.  Pixelpipe does not geotag photos you take within the app.  Boo.  I have never seen a camera app that doesn't allow geotagging.

Pixelpipe also has trouble uploading vertical pictures correctly to their destination sites.  I took two pictures with a vertical orientation.  I named them "Reflections" and "Grande Mocha Coconut Frappaccino."  In Pixelpipe and in my Camera Roll, the pictures are shown the way they should look - vertical.  But, the same picture at all other "destinations" are shown rotated horizontally as shown in the picture below.

Again, I have never seen an app that is unable to handle the correct orientation of a picture.  Very, very disappointing.  Pictures taken with Pixelpipe in a horizontal orientation are uploaded correctly.

On the other hand, one of the great features of Pixelpipe is the ability to change the title, description and tags of the picture before you upload it.

Still, a lack of geotagging and the inability to handle vertically-oriented pictures correctly are dealbreakers for me.  While uploading pictures to multiple websites is a great idea, I won't do it at the cost of the basic features I'm already accustomed to.

iPhone Over-The-Air Document Synching

You asked for it, so we're going to give it to you!  There are at least two iPhone apps that can sync your documents over the air!  I tried Box.net [iTunes link] and MiGhtyDocs [iTunes link].  Up until recently, you needed a wifi network to sync your documents to your iPhone.  Both of the apps I am reviewing only require an Internet connection to sync.  And you don't really upload the file to your iPhone.  The files are uploaded to a website which the apps can read.  Both apps are free, but they really do come at a price - a lack of features.

MiGhtyDocs

Last week, the first Google Android platform mobile phone, the T-Mobile G1, was released and one of its features is syncing Google Documents over the air.  MiGhtyDocs attempts to mimic that feature.  And I wouldn't say it's entirely successful.

Google Documents already comes with its own upload restrictions. You can only upload:

Most types of documents (e.g. MS Word, HTML, .txt) MS PowerPoint presentations Spreadsheets (e.g. .csv, .xls, .ods) Adobe PDF

MiGhtyDocs only supports documents and spreadsheets. This is not looking good.

Documents load fine, but spreadsheet support is not very good. I uploaded five MS Excel spreadsheets.  The results range from very good to very bad.  Some spreadsheets showed up in a weird alignment.  One spreadsheet couldn't load at all.

The one great feature MiGhtyDocs has is its ability to view a document even when you don't have an Internet connection.  The green dot next to the document name (pictured, above) means the file has been saved in a cache and you don't need the internet to view it.

MiGhtyDocs has tremendous potential to be a great app.  With a few more updates, it may even be usable.

Box.net

You can go to Box.net to sign up for a free gigabyte of space to upload your documents for later viewing on your iPhone.  I have to say that this app exceeded my expectations in many areas.

Like the Datacase and Air Sharing apps, Box.net supports mp3s, Word documents, Excel spreadsheets, pictures and PDFs.  It even was able to display my mhtml file, which is a file neither Datacase nor Air Sharing could view.  However, the free subscription does not allow you to upload a file more than 25MB, so I couldn't upload a video to check that out.  Also, PDFs, especially large ones, take some time to load and view.

The only reason why I cannot recommend Box.net over similar wifi syncing apps is its lack of landscape mode.  PDFs are almost impossible to read without landscape mode.

Box.net is a great first attempt at over-the-air document synching.  Hopefully, landscape mode, which is its only blemish, can be added in a future update.

Mcleaner – show your calls and texts who’s the Boss

Now when I get the urge to try a new app that I see on the App Store, or maybe hear about in Cydia, I always go in with the same 3 questions. Is it easy to use? Is it something that I'll use? And is it stable? There are tons of other things I look at, but these are the 3 I focus on. So with that in mind lets take a look at Mcleaner, a new application available in Cydia, via the iSpazio's repo.

Now typically this is one of those ones I'd sub consciously pass over. The description said something about blocking SMS messages and phone calls, and I'm thinking, when would I ever use this? But this time it was almost like a little bird was whispering in my ear, "Go ahead Cody, try Mcleaner out, maybe even review it on idownloadblog.com." He sounded French. Anyways I listened and decided to give it a try.

Wow. That's not the word I'll be using at the end of this article, but that's what I first thought when I opened the App. This looked so well done, especially for a Cydia App. By default you start off in the 'Working Mode' profile, but you can create others. Maybe you have a 'work mode' and then a 'church mode'. Then you can setup your whitelist and blacklist.  The white list is a list of contact names or phone numbers that you would like allowed on this particular profile. And of course the black list is a list of names and numbers that you wouldn't like to contact you.  You may also schedule profiles to take affect at certain times, for example, 'work mode' can be scheduled 8-5 M-F, I though this was pretty cool.

Everything seems to be made so effortless for the user, as you are given several choices when asked to add a contact to a list, add from contacts, input number, add from recents, etc.  You may also choose to block unknown and private numbers, perfect if you are constantly getting harassed by telemarketers and the like. The developer definitely gets an A+ in ease of use here.  We can go ahead and throw in one for stability as well, I haven't had any issues, and a quick test block on my girlfriend's number proved successful.

So Cody, this thing sounds sweet, should I go ahead and download? Ah, ah, ah, this is why there are 3 questions. I have to say, Mcleaner is very well put together, but has a very small target audience. Unless you are wanting to avoid bill collectors, or that creepy guy at the office that always texts "Sup?", I don't see any other real use for this application. Now, I'm sure if your attending high stakes meetings on a daily basis, you might find this program very useful. But for the majority of us, well me at least, I'll stick to the good old mute switch on the side of my iPhone. I generally hit it on my way into the office, and it has served me well.  Especially since at the end of the 15 day trial, your asked to pay 11.99. One love.

DataCase vs. Air Sharing

[digg-me]One of the reasons I chose an iPhone is because of the large amount of onboard memory.  However, a non-jailbroken iPhone can only sync files through iTunes.  That means you are limited to the files you can upload to your high-tech device.  That's where applications from the App Store come in.

There are many apps that can fill this need.  However, two seem to stand out from the rest.  Datacase [iTunes link] was one of the first of the wifi file syncing apps.  And, Air Sharing [iTunes link] is apparently the most popular wifi file syncing app.  As of this writing, Air Sharing is No. 48 on the iTunes Top Paid Apps list.  That ranking, however, may or may not be skewed by the fact that it was offered as a free app for a limited time.  Keep in mind that these apps can only view documents and not edit them.

For a long time, I believed Air Sharing (pictured, left) was superior to DataCase because of how smoothly it handles PDF documents.  However, it appears that DataCase has made significant updates to compete with Air Sharing.

I downloaded the same files to both apps to compare how each app performs.

PDF - Winner: DataCase. Like I said earlier, I believe both apps handle this file type fairly smoothly.  When turning to landscape mode, there is a noticeable pause on both apps.  But, I'll give the nod to DataCase.  DataCase has controls to go to the first and last page, which is helpful for PDFs that are hundreds of pages long. Datacase also has a great bookmarking feature, to tab pages that you frequently go to.  Air Sharing does have an accelerated page turning function if you hold down the button.  But, that doesn't cut it when you're trying to get to page 200.

Excel - Push. Both apps perform equally well when viewing Excel documents.  But, then again, I don't have really complicated Excel documents.

MP3 - Push. Both apps had no problem playing the same MP3 file using QuickTime.

Pictures - Air Sharing. I downloaded a JPG to both apps.  I'll give the slight edge to Air Sharing because I can use a double-tap OR a pinch out to zoom.  A single tap in Air Sharing removes the border for full-screen viewing.  In DataCase, a single-tap removes the borders but cannot recognize a double-tap to zoom.

MHTML & QuickTime Movie - Push. Although you can upload them, both apps equally failed at displaying an MHTML file and playing a QuickTime movie.  Granted, MHTML is a weird file type but I knew both could view HTML files.  And for some reason, neither app can play QuickTime movies which is really disappointing.

Setup - Air Sharing. Air Sharing is by far easier to set up.  It has instructions right inside the app.  DataCase's setup is a bit quirky, for Windows XP users at least.  It's best to go to the Veiosoft website to learn how to set up DataCase.

Graphical Interface - DataCase. Air Sharing has a straightfoward look to it, which is not bad in itself.  But, DataCase brings a lot to the table.  The opening screen of DataCase shows a doughnut which is a graph of the amount of free space on your iPhone.  As you fill up Datacase, you will see colors which represent the different types of files.  Also, when you're uploading large files (pictured, above) DataCase tells you how far along you are in your uploading.  It's also nice to see which types of files are taking up the most space.  And, you can filter out certain file types when navigating.  One nice feature that Air Sharing does have, however, is the ability to easily navigate through a string of folders.  On the other hand, I'm not sure why you can't create folders in the Air Sharing app alone.  You have to do it in the shared folder on your desktop.

Both apps are $6.99 in the App Store.

Say Who? It’s a little More Like Say What?

So here we go, from the same people who brought you the application Say Where?, comes another decent attempt at voice recognition software. Or is it?

The idea is quite simple. It allow users to dial their contacts by speaking their name. Always interested in shortening lengthy tasks, I downloaded this application to see if I could eliminate the 4 step manual dialing process (press phone, go to contacts or recent calls, scroll to find number, and press call).

At first glance it seemed as though this application might find its way into an exclusive spot on my springboard. Clicking the icon opens up a single screen that has a large square button to press when you are ready to speak a contact's name. Well that's only 2 steps, so Say Who wins, right?

Wrong. It's 2 steps to get to your first attempt at dialing a contact. While the previous app I reviewed from Excuse Me Services shined in the voice recognition department, this one fell flat on it's face. Both voice dialing and speaking the contact's name returned horrible results. Sure, in exact silence, using perfect diction, I was able to get a few right answers.

But I don't live in solitary confinement, I live in the real world, and the real world has background noise in it. Especially when traveling in my car, which is where I would find this app most useful anyways.

Maybe if they were to combine this with their Say Where application with more accurate voice recognition, it'd be worthwhile to download. It would also be advantageous to continue to run in the background, or at least when the screen is locked (once again in my car dock). We continue to see innovative software from these guys, but unless you're accustomed to yelling obscenities at your iPhone driving down the turnpike, I suggest you stay away.

This one definitely falls in the "look-what-my-phone-can-do" category, but may throw you under the bus when trying to demonstrate to your friends. "Call Randy" , "Calling Mom." "No I swear it usually gets it on the first try, watch!"

iBowl: For those Can-your-Phone-do-this-ers, and that’s it

From the makers of iGolf comes iBowl, the game that promises that you can "take the lanes with you wherever you go." But before you hang up your real bowling shoes, there are a few things you should know. I myself got excited when doing my daily browse of the Top 25 Free applications in Apple's App Store. After reading through several raving reviews, and considering its #2 position on the Top 25, I decided to give it a go.

The first thing you see when the application is loaded is a set of very simple instructions. Select what side of the lane you wish to throw from, and hold down the "bowl" button strategically placed in the middle of the screen (so you can cradle your phone in your hand) and bowl. Let go (of the button, not your phone), and watch your ball soar rather randomly down the lane and knock over pins. Their description on the App Store claimed it detected spinning your iPhone to spin the ball but I have yet to experience it.

Now, some of you might be thinking, it's free what did you expect. Well, I didn't really expect anything, after all, I wasn't a fan of iGolf when it was released. I have to admit this game does have a few nice features such as the ability to play a full 10 frames, and a high score board to keep track of the 'king pin'. But don't let the "challenge a friend" option fool you, it just opens a new email with an inserted link to download iBowl.

A few suggestions from this lowly iPhone gamer would be to tighten up the acuracy on the ball movement down the lane, or even to explore other options like using touch instead of the accelorometer. Some realistic physics, or at least random pin action would help out.

Also, SGN could consider selling cases with adjustable wrist straps to lower the amount of iBowl related damaged iPhones. Changing the fake "challenge a friend" option into at least 2 player mode just goes without saying.

So although it is a descent presentation and a neat idea, this thing is about as useful as the apps iLighter and iBeer, mostly for those "hey can your phone do this"ers. I found that this application sat unused on the springboard unless I was showing it to people, and even then could only muster up a few frames before it got tiresome.

SGN seems to have some great ideas going with these iSports apps, and I'm excited to see what updates and future apps they bring us.