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Posts Tagged ‘ Apple App Store ’

By Bob Brown
January 24, 2011

FRAMINGHAM – The Apple App Store hit the 10 billion app download mark overnight on Friday, marking a milestone involving an awful lot of Doodle Jump, Tap Tap Revenge and Angry Birds playing, not to mention Facebook and Pandora usage.

Apple is rewarding the downloader of the 10 billionth  free or paid App Store app with a $10,000 iTunes gift card in a bit of showmanship that Willy Wonka would be proud of. As of 7AM EST, however, Apple hadn’t publicly identified the winner, only saying that you’d need to come back later to find out who won.

MORE APPLE: iPhone 5 “iPhoneys” emerge

Apple put an iOS app countdown ticker on its Website last week to build buzz around the milestone and generated about 250 million app downloads since.  It also revealed a list of all-time most downloaded free and paid iPhone and iPad apps.

The Apple App Store hit the 1 billion mark in April of 2009, after opening in July of 2008.

Apple celebrated the 10 billionth song downloaded a little less than a year ago: Johnny Cash’s “Guess Things Happen That Way.

ANALYSIS: A billion reasons to read about Apple, Facebook and others

Apple’s year has gotten off to a captivating start, with CEO Steve Jobs taking a medical leave,  the company posting stellar financial results for Q1,  Apple showing up among the top 50 patent recipients in the United States,  and with buzz building for the iPhone 5 smartphone and iPad 2 tablet computer.

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By Joel Mathis
December 15, 2010

SAN FRANCISCO – A desktop program that lets users create personal wikis has made its debut as an application for the iPhone and iPad.

VoodooPad for iOS, an offering from developer Flying Meat, made its debut last Friday in Apple’s App Store. It’s a slimmed-down version of its desktop counterpart, giving users the power to create documents that interlink and cross-reference information–including URLs and images–and to sync back-and-forth with the desktop version of VoodooPad via WebDAV and MobileMe.
While the app offers more flexibility than VP Reader, Flying Meat’s free iOS app that let VoodooPad users view their documents on their iPhones in read-only mode, the documentation for the new app reveals some limitations. There is no support for rich-text editing within the app; documents synced from an iPhone or iPad back to a user’s desktop lose their formatting as a result.  There is no support for encryption, nor for syncing VoodooPad documents through Dropbox.
VoodooPad for iOS costs $10 and is compatible with all devices running iOS 4.2 or later.

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By Beau Colburn


Cool fx is a image-editing app by photo industry veterans The Tiffen Company. In its App Store description, Cool fx promises to simulate different colour and black-and-white photographic looks, diffusion, motion picture and film stocks, and optical lab processes. It certainly delivers on that promise –perhaps too much so for some users.

Cool fx functions very simply while giving you a large range of options. As soon as the app launches, you are prompted to pick a photo from your camera’s photo roll. Once you’ve picked your photo, you have five effect areas from which you can alter the photo: Black & White, Color, Diffusion, Grain, and Temperature. Each of these effects categories contain anything from 18 to 50 individual options for specific adjustments to be made.

For example, when choosing to adjust a image in the Black & White setting, you have more than 40 options from which to select (8mm, Old Newspaper, Sepia, and so on). From there, you can dig further in and make individual adjustments to each specific setting. With more than 170 presets — and the ability to adjust each individually — the possibilities are limitless.

For consumer-level users, the options are so broad that it could be a problem. For Digital Arts readers looking to mess about with their iPhone photos, it offers all the control you could wish for. There is, of course, the question of why you wouldn’t just use a computer if you needed that much adjustment control.

If you have the need to add a huge range of effects to an image while on the iPhone, Cool fx provides tons of options. (And it’s currently on sale for $1, as of this writing.) However, if you just want to tweak a few pictures every now and then, there are other apps out there that may feel less overwhelming.

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