Archive for the ‘Iphone Atlas’ Category

Battle Royale 3: A tale of four smartphone screens

The iPhone 4 is back to defend its championship screen title against some worthwhile opponents.

Originally posted at Dialed In

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Creative image projects and driving with zombies: iPhone apps of the week

This week’s apps include an image collage maker with tons of features and a driving game where the undead are on a mission to make you crash.

Originally posted at The Download Blog

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Ford Fiesta gets an app for iPad

When Ford releases an iPad app for the Fiesta, we expect to see some cool features. Instead, we get a digital brochure.

Originally posted at The Car Tech blog

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Tales2Go 2.0 adds caching, multitasking

With new subscription options, multitasking support, offline listening, and more, what was already a killer app for kids 3-11 just got even better.
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Gundam apps for iOS surface at Tokyo Game Show

Out of the Toyko Game Show and onto the Internet sneak a trio of hands-on videos for three Mobile Suit: Gundam themed iOS apps.

Originally posted at Crave

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Find the airplane flying over your head

Plane Finder by Pinkfroot is an iPhone app that uses uses a mashup of Google Maps to show current flights in a given area.
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MegaReader: 1.8 million e-books on your iPhone

If there’s a free book on the Internet, chances are good you can download it with this app. Get public-domain classics, modern freebies, and more, all for $1.99.
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Justin TV 2.0 brings live video broadcasting to iPhone (hands-on)

The second Justin.tv iPhone app adds the ability to broadcast live video to its playback feature, making it a much more powerful and competitive app.
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Report: Apple, RIM losing market share to Android

Google’s Android continues to surge in popularity among smartphone users, with its main competitors all shrinking or stagnating in market share.

Originally posted at News – Wireless

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Apple changes a name that could change repair policies

Apple has changed the name of one of the key components used to determine whether or not damage was caused by liquid submersion. Though the change is subtle, now the Liquid Contact Indicator, it could signal a change in Apple’s repair policies.
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