Tag Archive for 'iphone'

Pandora and the top 10 free iPhone applications

I have my Scottish ancestors to thank for being this tight, but I am only interested in the free apps. Here is my top 10 list of free applications currently on my iPhone.

  1. Pandora on the iPhone is amazing. It makes your iPhone into a commercial-free transistor radio, in a sense. Perfect for the towel on sand at Brighton, or North Avenue Beach.
  2. Twittelator is my must have Twitter app. Twitterific was great, but now has intrusive ads . . . ’nuff said.
  3. Last.fm also gives you a Pandora-like radio experience
  4. AIM - of course!
  5. Weatherbug - so much more detail than the basic Apple weather app. Love the animated radar - a life saver in Chicago.
  6. Google mobile app - gives you direct access to your Google docs.
  7. Facebook - natch!
  8. Truphone - for making skype like calls to international friends for pennies.
  9. BA Flights - to track real time flight info for British Airways flights I or friends might be taking. (Hello, American Airlines - get with the program, people . . ) Would also love it if Kayak or Sidestep offered a native app, too.
  10. Translators: The free Coolgorilla talking phrases apps include text and audio translations for common phrases in German, French, Spanish and Italian.

Ich verstehe nur bahnhof . . .
One more fave is the Apple Remote app that let’s you control your mac’s Tunes player with your iPhone. This one is creepy cool.

The one app to make this a baker’s dozen will be the forthcoming Wordpress native app that will allow me to post and edit my blogs from my iPhone.

On the wish list
First would be a version of Flickr where I could view photos and sets and also upload geotagged photos.
Second would be a del.icio.us app that let me view, sort, search and push bookmarks around or do something I haven’t thought of yet . .
Third would be a Scribd mobile app.

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Will anyone use their iPhone 2.0, um, to make calls?

I admit, I rarely use my iPhone to make calls. Not that there is anything wrong with calling or getting calls. It’s just this - do you really need to blah, blah, blah all the time with your voice when there are often more useful ways to connect using SMS, e-mail and Web sites (Like Twitter and Facebook) using the Web browser?

I look at my phone bill and all of those wasted minutes for “Voice” that slip past.
I don’t mind calls, I even occasionally make them but more often I initiate voice calls with my Skype account instead of my iPhone. Esp when I travel - it’s so easy and saves me thousands on roaming charges and all. I like the option to open a chat window and pass Web links while I talk with someone. That multi-channel style is just more natural to the types of conversations I have with clients and friends. We talk about a trend and I pass a link to the research. We talk about a video and I pass a link . . . etc.

How to save money with your iPhone
So here’s my setup for mojo with the iPhone. Get a Skype IN account (Not expensive and gives you a phone number in what area code you like.)

Put a few Euros, Pounds or dollars on the account and enjoy making long-distance, international calls to people’s landlines or mobiles for pennies. I use Skype all the time and I top up with $20 about once every six months. Skype just cannot be beat on price. All you need is wi-fi access and you are set. I usually have Wi-Fi in the offices I work in and rooms I stay in . . .

Back to to the iPhone - here’s the first step before I get on a plane - i go into settings and forward my calls to my Skype In phone number. So that way if get an unknown or blocked call to my iphone while I am in, say Paris, the call routes to my Skype voice mail and I can check it next time I log on to my laptop.
Then I can use Skype out to call back at very low cost. If my friend also is on Skype - it costs me nothing!

The other thing I do is to encourage close business contacts to SMS (Text message) me instead of calling.
That way I retain an instant contact mechanism and a thread I can use to organize my hectic schedule. Overseas use of SMS is ubiquitous and very practical - It really is a killer app.

Use a local SIM card while traveling
Now, sometimes I actually do need to either make many or receive many phone calls while I am on-site working. For example in Sweden last week - The WAN office issued me a staff mobile phone to use for the Video Journalism project I was producing for them.
I hate to carry two mobiles so, all I did was pop the sim card from the swedish phone into my iPhone for the week and worked away vis voice and SMS. I updated close contacts with my temporary number and tossed the SIM when the gig was done. To do this I used the Independence software to temporarily unlock my iPhone’s SIM card. I just re-locked the iPhone yesterday with my AT&T card since I have no plans to leave the country for a couple months. Plus I want to now play with all the new goodies today that Apple will unveil in the form of upgrades and new software services.

Turn off Data Roaming
One key thing to set in your user settings is to turn off DATA Roaming before switching your iPhone on in places like Egypt or Germany. Data roaming is a sweet pot of honey for the mobile telcos and there is no reason to activate it (It is ON by default, btw) if you know that you will find wi-fi connection hot spots. This is key - right after the iPhone debuted I took it to Cairo and did not know this was on and ATAT tried to bill me hundreds of dollars for just getting my e-mail. It automatically connected all the time and was a huge ripoff. I fought and won - they now AT&T warns you via SMS messages that your data roaming is on when entering a new country and I always check to see that mine is turned off.

Where will you go for the iPhone 2.0 news?

Funny, I will be following today the new iPhone 2.0 Steve Jobs keynote from the usual sources like Macrumors.com (Which has always had the best live streaming feed!) and some new sources like FriendFeed and Summize - services that aggregate and filter by keyword what my own social network is reporting on and linking to with regards to this event. A new paradigm and again, a load of new information reaching that never involved me making nor receiving a phone call.

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Why the iPhone may rule the (journalism) world


You know, when the iPhone came out - many people were jealous and quickly showed that their mobile phones also had Google maps, push e-mail and maybe even a touchscreen. OK. Now you can ask them - can you convincingly play the melody to “Chopsticks” on your phone? Or are you in an iPhone band?

Bear with me - this blog is really about the future of mobile journalism
This video above is of a digital piano program, or application, that runs on the iPhone. And it it runs on any iPhone that has been hacked to allow users to install new programs on it. The news is that today may be the last day that you would need to “jailbreak” your iPhone to get new functions like this.

At 10 a.m PST time today Apple is set to allow developers (The people who write software applications) to finally release their wares to all iPhone users. Most of the global digerati press corps I know is on a plane right now to Texas right now to cover the SXSW festival. It’s a shame some of them were not invited to Cupertino to talk with the developers who have been invited to Apple’s famous Building No. 4 to get the lowdown on the new capabilities that will soon be coming to iPhone owners.

Yeah some of the news out of there may sound boring, and it is. Boring can be powerful - like access to your corporate e-mail and private networks. That’s a good move on Apple’s part because it will allow more IT departments to bless the iPhone as legit work tool and powerful mobile platform - which it clearly is.

But the real blessing and low-hanging fruit for Apple and all us iPhone power users will be the ability to legitimately install new programs that tap into all of the devices gadgetry.

Robb's modded iPhone

Robb’s modded iphone has advanced instant messaging, a direct to Flickr camera and many other tweaks and apps designed for filing media rich field reports on the fly.

You may recall that back in November I blogged about using a jailbroken iPhone in a Medill classroom lecture to produce live journalism reports using third-party apps.

More than ringtones, wallpaper and hacks . . . modding an iPhone can put new superpowers in the hands of your reporting staff. I believe that a properly configured iPhone will allow reporters to do more reporting from the field - closer to their community, closer to sources, closer to where they should be doing their best work.

So, e-piano’s and motion-sensing games may sound silly and useless to a reporter but I promise you there are already some amazing new programs in the works that aren’t.

In the meantime - enjoy the video from the first iPhone band.

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