Tag Archives: App Store

App Store Update: July 31

Every day hundreds of new apps make their debut on the App Store, and hundreds more are updated or reduced in price. We have sifted through the noise and highlighted those select few that might be worth your attention. For more mobile game trailers, reviews and news be sure to Subscribe to IGNMobileGames on YouTube.

Lub vs. Dub – ($0.99)

A smart twist on the common endless runner genre brings two characters into competition against each other, running on opposite sides of the same line – that line being a heart rate monitor, too. Who will emerge victorious? Lub, or Dub?

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Video Games

The state of the Windows Store: How useful are those 100,000 apps?

More than nine months into the great revamping known as Windows 8, a clear vision of its core is finally starting to emerge. The baked-in apps have been streamlined and Windows 8.1 looms, ready to polish the numerous rough edges found in the original release of the operating system. But Microsoft alone can’t improve what is truly the beating heart of Windows 8: The Windows Store.

Windows 8 revolves around the Windows Store. Every Live Tile that glimmers on the modern-style Start screen is the iconic representation of a Windows 8 app—and you can only snag Windows 8 apps in Microsoft’s own Windows Store. As the Windows Store goes, so goes the Windows 8 experience.

How, exactly, is the Windows Store doing? The obvious indicators are mixed. Windows RT devices can run only modern-style apps, not desktop apps, and they’re tanking hard. But app submissions picked up steam around the time of Microsoft’s Build conference, culminating in the shattering of the 100,000-app barrier in early July, and they’re still going (relatively) strong.

That’s a great milestone for Microsoft, but it’s still paltry compared to the approximately 1 million apps in Google Play and 900,000 apps in Apple’s App Store. So it’s a good time to take the pulse of the Windows Store again: Is 100,000 apps enough to keep a body happy? As I did last February, I spent days scouring the Windows Store and taking notes in five major categories: games, music apps, video apps, social apps, and a catch-all “other” category—to see how well Microsoft covered each. Here’s how they all measured up.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

App Store Update: July 29

Every day hundreds of new apps make their debut on the App Store, and hundreds more are updated or reduced in price. We have sifted through the noise and highlighted those select few that might be worth your attention. For more mobile game trailers, reviews and news be sure to Subscribe to IGNMobileGames on YouTube.

A Brief History of the World – ($2.99)

It’s a board gaming kind of day in the App Store today, and first up is the newly released “A Brief History of the World” by the Ragnar Brothers. Starting in 3000 BC and ending in 1942, the game explores the rise and decline of major empires of the world together with minor empires and kingdoms. Players marshal armies against one another, crossing seas and oceans by fleets and building forts to better protect their lands. Capitals, cities ands monuments are built to bring the gold needed for victory. More gold is collected as the result of occupation of areas of the map.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Video Games

App Store Update: July 24

Every day hundreds of new apps make their debut on the App Store, and hundreds more are updated or reduced in price. We have sifted through the noise and highlighted those select few that might be worth your attention. For more mobile game trailers, reviews and news be sure to Subscribe to IGNMobileGames on YouTube.

Lums – ($0.99)

In a world where vampires have invaded and stolen the sun, it’s up to you to control the movements of the glowing Lums – as they crash into the vamps’ protective, shadowy shelters Angry Birds-style to let in light and burn the baddies to a crisp. It looks and sounds brilliant. Check out the trailer, at the very least:

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Video Games

App Store Update: July 23

Every day hundreds of new apps make their debut on the App Store, and hundreds more are updated or reduced in price. We have sifted through the noise and highlighted those select few that might be worth your attention. For more mobile game trailers, reviews and news be sure to Subscribe to IGNMobileGames on YouTube.

Expander – ($0.99)

Getting things started today is Expander, a “how fast are your reflexes?” reaction challenge that sends a block sailing through a hallway and tasks you to keep it from crashing into walls as its size swells and contracts. Take a look:

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Video Games

App Store Update: July 22

Every day hundreds of new apps make their debut on the App Store, and hundreds more are updated or reduced in price. We have sifted through the noise and highlighted those select few that might be worth your attention. For more mobile game trailers, reviews and news be sure to Subscribe to IGNMobileGames on YouTube.

Freedom Fall – (Free)

Freedom Fall fits in with the endless runner genre, but directs its constantly moving hero downward instead of to the right. Can you help him avoid obstacles on his descent?

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Video Games

App Store Update: July 19

Every day hundreds of new apps make their debut on the App Store, and hundreds more are updated or reduced in price. We have sifted through the noise and highlighted those select few that might be worth your attention. For more mobile game trailers, reviews and news be sure to Subscribe to IGNMobileGames on YouTube.

The video’s on its way later today. Stay tuned!

Pac-Man Dash! – (Freemium)

Namco Bandai is in the middle of a major push to bring Pac-Man back into the spotlight, having launched a new Saturday morning cartoon starring him on Disney XD earlier this Summer, and developing a new 3D platformer for him on all the major consoles and 3DS (set to be released this Fall).

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Video Games

VLC Media Player Back on App Store After Nearly 3 Years

Image Source: Ars Tech/VLC

Late in 2010, an iOS version of the popular, open-source VLC media player appeared on the App Store. But by January 2011, Apple had pulled the app, facing possible litigation from one of VLC’s original creators. According to a report from Ars Technica, version 2.0 of the app has now returned to the New Zealand and Australian App Stores, with a U.S. launch scheduled for late Thursday night.

Image Source: Ars Tech/VLC

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Tech

App Store Update: July 16

Every day hundreds of new apps make their debut on the App Store, and hundreds more are updated or reduced in price. We have sifted through the noise and highlighted those select few that might be worth your attention. For more mobile game trailers, reviews and news be sure to Subscribe to IGNMobileGames on YouTube.

MetalWars3 – ($1.99)

Every Tuesday is a little bit better when you’re riding along inside the cockpit of a giant walking tank. MetalWars3 is your latest way to go Gundam on your iDevice:

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Video Games

App Store Update: July 15

Every day hundreds of new apps make their debut on the App Store, and hundreds more are updated or reduced in price. We have sifted through the noise and highlighted those select few that might be worth your attention. For more mobile game trailers, reviews and news be sure to Subscribe to IGNMobileGames on YouTube.

Zombies!!! – ($4.99)

It’s easy to get tired of zombie games in the App Store, as there are new ones shoved out the door every single day, it seems – but don’t skip over this one. Zombies!!! (that’s precisely three exclamation points, mind you) is a classic board game that pre-dates a lot of the modern overuse of the undead idea, and this new iOS virtualization of the tangible game looks great.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Video Games

Tech Fetish Podcast: iPad mini Rumors, Big Brother, and More

Tune in for the latest episode of the Tech Fetish podcast, IGN’s consumer electronics and technology podcast. This week, hosts Scott Lowe, Mark Ryan Sallee, and Justin Davis discuss rumors of Apple’s delay of a new retina display-enabled iPad mini, photos of Google’s Moto X phone, Surface RT price cuts, and the ongoing sagas of the NSA’s spying practices, Apple’s eBook pricing scandal, and the dispute over the term App Store.

 Click to download this week’s podcast. (Must Right Click to Save)

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Tech

App Store Update: July 12

Every day hundreds of new apps make their debut on the App Store, and hundreds more are updated or reduced in price. We have sifted through the noise and highlighted those select few that might be worth your attention. For more mobile game trailers, reviews and news be sure to Subscribe to IGNMobileGames on YouTube.

No video today, ASU fans. But hey, scroll down a bit and you’ll forgive us – tons and tons of great freebies are compiled here in today’s Update.

Dungeon of Legends – ($2.99)

A new dungeon-crawler that brings elements of platforming and puzzle-solving into the mix alongside the usual hack-and-slash action:

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Video Games

Microsoft's New Toy Is a Preemptive Attack on Apple

By Rick Munarriz, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

A lot has been said about Microsoft‘s Xbox One since it was introduced on Tuesday. However, here’s something that you probably haven’t heard: Xbox One is a preemptive strike on Apple .

Think about it. Apple is working on a smart television. Shortly before his death, Steve Jobs told his biographer that he had cracked the problem with smart TVs. CEO Tim Cook told NBC’s Brian Williams — on primetime television — that it’s an area of “intense interest” at Apple.

Let’s dream out loud. What would an Apple smart TV do?

Well, thanks to the popularity of Siri, it’s a safe bet that there would be some degree of voice recognition. Xbox One has that. “Watch TV” switches to live TV. “Watch AMC” switches the channel. “What’s on HBO?” pulls up the channel’s listings guide.

Apple’s device would also probably incorporate FaceTime video chat. Yes, Microsoft’s all over that. The Xbox One allows for Skype video chats — with multiple users at the same time.

Naturally, there would be some App Store integration with live content, but Xbox One is there already. You can pull up personalized fantasy stats during NBA and NFL games. You can be playing a Blu-ray disc and switch to a split screen to pull up Internet Explorer to figure out where you know that actress from through IMDB or pull up movie ratings on Rotten Tomatoes.

App Store integration naturally means playing games on your TV, and Xbox One naturally will have Apple beat on that front.

The clincher here is that Microsoft already has tens of millions of active Xbox Live users. They all won’t hop on the Xbox One platform right away, but they will over time as prices get cheaper.

However, as expensive as the Xbox One will be, a full blown Apple HDTV will probably cost more than a Microsoft console with an existing flat screen. Now that we know that Microsoft will have its new toy out in time for this year’s holiday shopping season, it’s not as if Apple can get a head start here.

The more you think about it, the more you may start to realize that Apple may already be too late.

The only way Apple could realistically have a game-changer in an Xbox One world would be to revolutionize pay TV. Rolling out a piecemeal service in which consumers pay only for the channels that they watch — or the content that they watch — would more than justify Apple’s inevitably high price.

The problem, unfortunately, is that cable networks have every reason to be uncooperative here. They stand to lose big money if Apple disrupts cable and satellite television providers. If Apple hasn’t been able to get iRadio off the ground as negotiations with the music labels have been reportedly rough, how is Apple going to talk studios and content creators to disrupt a model that will save consumers money at their expense?

The Xbox One is bigger blow to …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

How Apple Accidentally Revolutionized Health Care

By Keith Speights, The Motley Fool

2014 Toyota 4Runner reveal at Stagecoach Music Fest

Filed under:

Apple didn’t necessarily intend to revolutionize health care, but that’s exactly what happened. Health care has changed dramatically since Steve Jobs first stood in front of an audience to introduce first the iPhone then later the iPad. Much of that change can be directly attributed to Apple.

 

Source: 3D4Medical.

Apples and doctors
It used to be said that an apple a day keeps the doctor away. That could still be applicable, but the opposite is true for doctors and Apple. Physicians love their iPhones and iPads.

A study by Manhattan Research in 2011 found that 75% of physicians owned at least one Apple product. Vitera Healthcare‘s 2012 survey of health-care professionals backed up this high number. The company’s study found that 60% of respondents used an iPhone and 45% owned an iPad.

The real revolution, though, has come from how physicians and other health-care professionals are using Apple’s devices. Mobile applications opened the door for clinicians to instantly access a world of medical information at the point of care.

For example, WebMD‘s Medscape application allows physicians to check drug interactions, look up information about procedures, and see medical news updates on the fly. Medscape ranks first among the most frequently downloaded medical apps for iPhones and iPads.

Yale University’s School of Medicine even did away with paper materials for training upcoming physicians. The school provided iPads and wireless keyboards to all of its medical students. Other schools followed suit.

Health eVillages’ experience underscores the transformational impact of Apple’s technology. The not-for-profit organization provides mobile health technology to medical professionals in areas such as Kenya and Haiti. Lives have been saved that otherwise would have been lost, thanks to doctors in remote areas who use an iPad to access needed information.

Use of Apple’s products goes beyond serving as a reference tool, though. An application that allows radiologists to view MRIs as well as CT, PET, and SPECT scans on iPhones and iPads received FDA approval in 2011. More recently, the FDA cleared the way for privately held Welch Allyn to connect its portable ophthalmoscope to an iPhone for doctors to view retinal images using the company’s app.

iPatients
Apple perhaps unwittingly opened new horizons for patients also. By April 2012, the company’s App Store included more than 13,600 health-related applications.

A peek at some of the current top-selling apps shows how much Apple’s technology has empowered patients. One application allows individuals to monitor their sleep cycles. Another provides a detailed guide to help expectant mothers through their pregnancies.

Pharmaceutical companies are getting into the act. For example, Vivus recently introduced an app for iPhones (and Android phones) that complements its weight-loss drug. The app allows patients to record what they eat and track their weight plus receive regular information updates.

Vital Art and Science recently gained FDA approval to sell its myVisionTrack product, which enables people with macular degeneration and other degenerative eye diseases to monitor their

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

App Store Update: April 19

Every day hundreds of new apps make their debut on the App Store, and hundreds more are updated or reduced in price. We have sifted through the noise and highlighted those select few that might be worth your attention. For more mobile game trailers, reviews and news be sure to Subscribe to IGNMobileGames on YouTube.

Fist Face Fight – (Freemium)

You control a floating, disembodied fist that’s relentless attacking swarms of floating, disembodied faces. Fun!

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From: http://www.ign.com/articles/2013/04/19/app-store-update-april-19-2

App Store Update: April 18

Every day hundreds of new apps make their debut on the App Store, and hundreds more are updated or reduced in price. We have sifted through the noise and highlighted those select few that might be worth your attention. For more mobile game trailers, reviews and news be sure to Subscribe to IGNMobileGames on YouTube.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Rooftop Run – ($1.99)

Based on the newest TMNT cartoon currently airing on Nickelodeon (which is excellent, by the way) this latest Turtles video game puts the four butt-kicking brothers into an endless runner design based on the thing they do so often in the show – running and jumping over New York City‘s rooftops.

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From: http://www.ign.com/articles/2013/04/18/app-store-update-april-18-2

Twitter launches its music service with iTunes, Spotify and Rdio integration

Twitter today unveiled a music service that uses activity on the microblog to help users share and discover new music.

The songs shared via the service are currently sourced from Spotify, iTunes or Rdio; other music service providers could be added later, Twitter said in a blog post announcing the service on Thursday.

Those who want to try the service can log in to the Web app on music.twitter.com. By default, Twitter will play previews from iTunes when users explore music in the app. Spotify and Rdio subscribers can log into their accounts to listen to full tracks that are available in the catalogs, it added.

The web version of the app will be rolling out over the next few hours and iOS users can download an app from the App Store. For the moment, the service will be available for the U.S., Canada, the U.K., Ireland, australia and New Zealand. The plan is to bring the service to Android and more countries over time, Twitter said.

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From: http://www.pcworld.com/article/2035670/twitter-launches-its-music-service-with-itunes-spotify-and-rdio-integration.html#tk.rss_all

App Store Update: April 17

Every day hundreds of new apps make their debut on the App Store, and hundreds more are updated or reduced in price. We have sifted through the noise and highlighted those select few that might be worth your attention. For more mobile game trailers, reviews and news be sure to Subscribe to IGNMobileGames on YouTube.

Fangz – ($0.99)

Help a fellow named Frank mow down endless hordes of vampires with every kind of weapon imaginable:

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From: http://www.ign.com/articles/2013/04/17/app-store-update-april-17-2

When Mobile Shoppers Get Mad, Don't Just Leave Them Your Number

By Alex Konrad, Forbes Staff

Retailers want shoppers making purchases from their mobile apps. But when something goes wrong, the brand has a very limited window in which to make things right. But according to a new survey the customer support tools many retailers prefer when their customer’s loyalty is on the line are actually making things worse–while less-popular tools are giving some the edge in retaining customers while dodging angry App Store reviews.

From: http://www.forbes.com/sites/alexkonrad/2013/04/17/mobile-shoppers-freshdesk-customer-support/