How to view an upside down PDF on the iPhone

Almost every day, I receive e-mails with PDF files attached that are scans of pleadings, briefs, exhibits, etc., either because someone scans something and e-mails it to me, or because someone faxes something to me.  (My law firm automatically converts all faxes to PDF files and then e-mails the file to the recipients.)  Every once in a while, someone will scan or fax a document upside down.  On a computer, this is only a minor inconvenience; I can just use the rotate command to rotate the image 180º to fix it.

On the iPhone, however, the solution is not so obvious.  When you get an upside down PDF, your natural inclination is to just rotate your iPhone, but as you do so, the image on the screen rotates with you, so it remains in the upside down position.  The result is frustrating, albeit mildly comical.

The solution is to hold a finger down on your screen and then rotate your iPhone so that it is upside down.  Do not move your finger while you are rotating.  Your finger on the screen prevents the iPhone from rotating while you turn it.  When you are finished, your iPhone will be upside down, but the PDF will appear right side up.

In the news

Yesterday, Apple released an iPhone update, iPhone Software 3.1.2.  No, you didn’t miss anything, there was no 3.1.1; the last public release was 3.1 on September 9, 2009.  3.1.2 is a minor release that fixes three bugs:  (1) a bug that would sometimes prevent an iPhone from waking from sleep mode, (2) a bug that could interrupt your cellular service until you restarted and (3) a bug that could cause a crash when streaming video.  I never experienced any of those problems, but I’m always happy to see bugs fixed before they make their way to my own iPhone.  I still hope to see iPhone Software 3.2 with new features before the end of this year.  I have no special information that it is coming; this is just my guess based on the release schedule after 2.0 came out last year.  Other interesting iPhone news from the last week:

  • If your company uses Lotus Notes,  you’ll be pleased to see this MacNN report that IBM has released version 8.5.1 which now supports the iPhone, including push e-mail and contacts.
  • Will AT&T limit data use by iPhone users?  PC World reports on a speech given this week by AT&T Wireless CEO Ralph de la Vega at the CTIA Conference in San Diego.  De la Vega said that just 3% of AT&T’s smartphone customers (presumably iPhone users) use 40% of all smartphone data, 13 times the usage of the average smartphone customer, but only represent 1% of AT&T’s total postpaid customer base.  To remedy this, De la Vega said:  “We have to manage the network to make sure that the few cannot crowd out the many.”  It’s not very clear what, if anything, this means, but PC World speculates rationing to limit use by heavy iPhone users.  We’ll see how this all shakes out.
  • Following up on my post from Wednesday about AT&T changing its position and allowing iPhones to use VoIP, yesterday David Pogue of the New York Times provided his analysis on the development.
  • There were lots of iPhone-related survey results released this week.  Let’s start with InfoWorld, which shares some of the highlights from a report on smartphones by CFI Group, a consultancy that helps businesses improve customer satisfaction.  Apple has the best customer satisfaction at 83%, followed by Android and Palm Pre at 77%, the Blackberry at 73%, the Palm Treo at 70%, and Symbian and Windows Mobile devices at 66%.  Other fun facts:  the iPhone scores highest for word-of-mouth recommendations, and people who use other smartphones are most likely to switch to an iPhone if they switch.  In the past, smartphones were mostly purchased by businesses, but today CFI says that they are mostly purchased by individuals for personal needs.
  • InformationWeek reports on a J.D. Power survey of business smartphone users and concludes that iPhone owners are the most satisfied with their smartphones.  Blackberry came in second.  One interesting statistic is that more than half of the business users surveyed said that they downloaded games for their smartphone, which J.D. Power saw as evidence that “business users are also integrating their

    devices into their personal lives.”  Indeed, this is the reason that I encourage so many lawyers to get an iPhone.  As I told Alan Cohen who wrote this recent article for AmLaw, if the only thing you want to do with your smartphone is read and respond to e-mail, then the Blackberry does that just fine, but I discourage people from thinking that e-mail is the only reason for a smartphone because you can do so much more.  The Blackberry can’t touch the iPhone when it comes to web browsing, photos, music, games, maps, the tens of thousands of third-party apps, not to mention other important features like ease of use.  As more people, including lawyers, realize all that a smartphone can do, even more people will opt for an iPhone.
  • And it’s not just the grown-ups who want an iPhone.  In a rare example of teenagers lusting after the same thing that their parents desire, Larry Dignan of ZDNet reports on Piper Jaffray’s bi-annual survey of

    teenagers, and the iPhone is what the kids want.  Six months ago, 8% of

    teens had an iPhone.  Now, 15% of teens own one, and another 22% expect

    to buy one soon.
  • If you are still hungry for more statistics, Tammy Parker writes an interesting story for telecoms.com following the recent 360iDev Conference.  For example, statistics show that the average paid iPhone app has 9,300 downloads, while the average free iPhone app has 71,000 downloads.  Another interesting statistic:  there are more $4.99 apps sold than any other price point.  
  • I’ve previously reviewed the Richard|Solo line of external batteries for the iPhone.  You can get a small 1200 mAh version for $40 that will give you almost another full charge on the iPhone, or the 1800 mAh $70 version that

    will bring you from 0% to 100% with even more charge left to use

    later.  (Disclosure:

    Richard|Solo gave me free units to review.)  Other companies also make iPhone batteries with similar capacities, but if you will find yourself away from an outlet for a really long time and need a lot of extra power, I see that USBFever is now selling the $60 Super Charger for iPhone.  It is larger than the Richard|Solo and similar products, but gives you a 3000 mAh battery that the company estimates will extend your talk time or online time 8.5 hours and video playback time 40 hours.  Of course, if that’s not enough, you can always get the HyperMac external batteries that I mentioned this past May and get 260 extra hours for only $500.
  • And finally, some game news for those of you who remember the classic computer games of the past.  In April, I mentioned that the groundbreaking game Myst was ported to the iPhone.  It is a graphics-rich and time-intensive game and at 533 MB it may well be the largest game you can download from the App Store.  TouchArcade reports that if you want to get a feel for the $4.99 game, you can now get Myst Free for, you guessed it, free.  It weighs in at 124 MB and has all of the features of the full version, but contains only one island, omitting the five additional “Ages” in the full game.  For anyone nostalgic for the great computer games of the past, this one is a must download.  Click here to get Myst Free (free): 
    Myst FREE

Review: Louisiana Legal Ethics — ethics website optimized for the iPhone

I used to be the chair of my firm’s Ethics Committee and I currently have responsibility for approving all new file openings, so I frequently find myself analyzing legal ethics.  As is true for many areas of law, there are lots of great Internet resources that can assist with an ethics analysis, from paid services such as the ABA/BNA Lawyers’ Manual on Professional Conduct to the free but excellent Freivogel on Conflicts.  But none of these sites are optimized for the iPhone.

As a Louisiana attorney, I was thrilled to learn that Loyola (New Orleans) Law School Professor Dane Ciolino, an expert on legal ethics, recently started the website Louisiana Legal Ethics.  The site includes not only frequent blog-style updates on legal ethics but also some great resources for Louisiana attorneys.  For example, the site includes a free and updated version of the book Louisiana Professional Responsibility Law and Practice which was published by the La. State Bar Association in 2001 and updated in 2004 and 2007, but which is now out of print and out of date.  Thus, you can easily view the current text of the Louisiana Rules of Professional Conduct along with background information on the rules, related ABA resources such as the comments to the corresponding ABA Model Rule and annotations including Louisiana case law.

The iPhone angle here is that Prof. Ciolino, who bought his first iPhone just a month ago, knew from the start that he wanted his website to work well on mobile devices because he hates working with websites that are not mobile-friendly.  (Don’t we all.)  Thus, he created his site using WordPress and then worked with a free plug-in called WPtouch iPhone theme to create a version of the website specially formatted for the iPhone screen (and which apparently also looks good on other smartphones).  Ciolino tells me that it took some tweaking to get everything working, but it was fairly easy to do.  Thus, if you go to the Louisiana Legal Ethics website on an iPhone, you will automatically see a version optimized for the iPhone screen:

You can even tap the arrow at the top right of every page to get a pop-up menu that allows you to search the site and jump to other main sections:

Ciolino plans to update Louisiana Legal Ethics on a daily basis, and even though the website is new, I know it will quickly become the go-to resource for Louisiana legal ethics issues.  iPhone users will love the ability easily access the current rules, comments, etc.  I am often asked to assess a legal ethics issue when I am not at my desk or at my computer but my iPhone is with me.

Ciolino’s website will primarily be useful for Louisiana attorneys, and while I know a bunch of them who read iPhone J.D. (and I love y’all!), the other reason for my post today is to express hope that other great legal resource websites will also create iPhone-friendly versions of their websites.  iPhone apps may be all the rage, but an updated website that is optomized for the iPhone screen is often just as useful.  (For example, my favorite iPhone weather app is not an app at all: the iPhone-optimized version of Weather Underground, located at i.wund.com.)  Safari on the iPhone is better than any other mobile browser, but there are still some websites that don’t display great on the iPhone screen because they require a lot of back-and-forth scrolling.  The solution is to offer an iPhone version of the website.

By the way, I have often thought about creating an iPhone version of this website, but I haven’t done so because I actually think that iPhone J.D. looks fine on an iPhone when you double-tap the middle column to zoom to the entries.  I don’t use any fancy, wide-page formatting other than the single graphic at the top.  Having said that, I still may do this one day just to figure out how it is done.  If any of you have experience setting up an iPhone theme for a TypePad website, let me know what you did.

Thanks to Dane Ciolino for creating a great resource for Louisiana lawyers, especially those of us who use an iPhone.

AT&T allows iPhones to use VoIP

I’ve written in the past about the usefulness of the Skype app when you are traveling internationally.  If you find WiFi in another country, the Skype app lets you use VoIP (voice over internet protocol) to dial home for just pennies and avoid the exorbitant roaming fees associated with using the cell phone service of a provider in another country to call home.  But when here in the U.S., the usefulness of an app like Skype was limited by the WiFi requirement.  You could place calls from the U.S. to other countries using Skype’s relatively cheap plans, but only when you had WiFi access.  You couldn’t use a VoIP app such as Skype with AT&T’s wireless service because AT&T viewed those services as competitors.  Even with the WiFi-only restriction, Skype has been very popular; the company revealed yesterday that Skype has been downloaded to 10% of all iPhone and iPod touch devices.  (Apple recently announced that 50 million devices have been sold, so that’s 5 million Skype downloads.)

A few months ago, when the FCC asked Apple, AT&T and Google to respond to questions relating to the Google Voice app for the iPhone, AT&T wrote extensively about why it was fair for AT&T to prohibit iPhone VoIP apps (see the bottom of this post), although AT&T did end its defense by saying that it “regularly reviews its policies” and that it planned to “take a fresh look at possibly authorizing VoIP capabilities on the iPhone for use on AT&T’s 3G network.”

Apparently, AT&T wasn’t just blowing smoke.  About six weeks after AT&T wrote to the FCC, AT&T announced yesterday that it reversed its policy and will now let VoIP apps such as Skype use the AT&T wireless network.  Thus, if you want to use your iPhone to make a call from the U.S. to another country, you can use services other than AT&T to try to save money on the call. I presume you can also use VoIP to make unlimited domestic calls without using up the minutes on your AT&T plan.

Skype is not the only iPhone VoIP app that will now be able to work without WiFi.  Earlier this week, Vonage released an iPhone app that lets you make cheaper international calls.  Some are unhappy with the app because it requires the user to establish a new account, so existing Vonage customers cannot use it with their current service.

It’s nice to have choices, and now if you want to use your iPhone to make international phone calls, AT&T’s policy’s change gives you more flexibility. 

– – – – – –

The following is of just historical importance now, but it is interesting to read AT&T’s justification for not allowing iPhone VoIP apps now that the company has reversed that position.  If you want more context, you can view the entire August 21, 2009 letter from AT&T to the FCC in PDF format on the FCC website by clicking here, but here is the part that discusses VoIP:

It is widely recognized by economists and jurists that parties to strategic alliances in competitive markets may enter into contracts to promote and protect their respective business interests and to refrain from taking actions adverse to those interests.12 Consistent with such lawful, economically efficient practices common among parties to strategic alliances, including participants in the mobile wireless marketplace,13 AT&T and Apple agreed that Apple would not take affirmative steps to enable an iPhone to use AT&T’s wireless service (including 2G, 3G and Wi-Fi) to make VoIP calls without first obtaining AT&T’s consent. AT&T and Apple also agreed, however, that if a third party enables an iPhone to make VoIP calls using AT&T’s wireless service, Apple would have no obligation to take action against that third party.

The parties’ concurrence on this provision was particularly important in light of the risks the parties assumed in bringing the iPhone to market. From the beginning, both AT&T and Apple recognized that each party would need to invest substantial capital and other resources to successfully develop, market and support the iPhone – a product with unprecedented features and capabilities from a manufacturer that had never before built a wireless phone.14    AT&T and Apple also recognized their mutual interest in stimulating sales in the highly competitive wireless marketplace by offering consumers the iPhone at an attractive retail price.

The parties’ willingness and ability to assume the risk of their investments in the iPhone and of their pricing strategy were predicated, in significant part, on certain assumptions about the monthly service revenues that would be generated by iPhone users. In particular, both parties required assurances that the revenues from the AT&T voice plans available to iPhone customers would not be reduced by enabling VoIP calling functionality on the iPhone. Thus, AT&T and Apple agreed that Apple would not take affirmative steps to enable an iPhone to use AT&T’s wireless service to make VoIP calls.

Without this arrangement, the prices consumers pay for the iPhone – particularly the broadband-enabled iPhone 3G – would likely have been higher than they are today. Indeed, AT&T offers the iPhone 3G to consumers at a price significantly below its cost as a result of the largest subsidy AT&T has ever provided on a wireless handset, on both a per-unit and aggregate basis.15    That subsidy has made the iPhone accessible to millions of consumers, at prices as low as $99 per iPhone 3G. Those consumers are taking advantage of its revolutionary features and capabilities for a wireless broadband Internet access experience that was not previously possible on any other handset. As a result, iPhone customers use their handset for broadband Internet access to a far greater degree than do customers of any other AT&T phone. As competitors roll out their own “iPhone killers,” customers of other phones undoubtedly will follow suit. In this sense, the iPhone and the subsidies that were instrumental in popularizing it, helped to spawn a sea-change in the way Americans access the broadband Internet.

During the course of the agreement, AT&T indicated to Apple that it does not object to Apple enabling VoIP applications for the iPhone that use Wi-Fi connectivity (including connectivity at more than 20,000 Wi-Fi hotspots operated by AT&T that may be used by iPhone customers for no additional charge) rather than AT&T’s 2G or 3G wireless data services. Although AT&T has no involvement in producing Apple’s iPhone Software Development Kit (SDK), which establishes the iPhone functionalities accessible to application developers, AT&T understands that the SDK enables application providers to develop VoIP applications that use the iPhone’s Wi-Fi capabilities and that such applications are currently available in the Apple App Store.

As noted above, AT&T regularly reviews its policies regarding features and capabilities available through the devices we offer in order to provide an attractive range of options for our customers. Consistent with this approach, we plan to take a fresh look at possibly authorizing VoIP capabilities on the iPhone for use on AT&T’s 3G network. AT&T will promptly update the Commission regarding any such change in its policies.

Footnotes:

12 See Continental T.V. v. GTE Sylvania, 433 U.S. 36, 54-55, 57-58 (1977) (“Vertical restrictions promote interbrand competition by allowing the manufacturer to achieve certain efficiencies in the distribution of his products. These ‘redeeming virtues’ are implicit in every decision sustaining vertical restrictions under the rule of reason. Economists have identified a number of ways in which manufacturers can use such restrictions to compete more effectively against other manufacturers” – such as inducing retailers to make “investment of capital and labor” or “engage in promotional activities,” as well as ensuring product quality and preventing free riding. “Such restrictions, in varying forms, are widely used in our free market economy. . . . [T]here is substantial scholarly and judicial authority supporting their economic utility. There is relatively little authority to the contrary.”). See also Richard J. Wegener, et al, Restricted Distribution 2009: Thirtysomething Sylvania and the State of Non-Price Vertical Restraints, American Law Institute – American Bar Association, SP050 ALI-ABA 43 (March 2009); William J. Kolasky, Jr., Antitrust Enforcement Guidelines for Strategic Alliances, Practicing Law Institute (July- August 1998).

13 See, e.g., Google Android Market Developer Distribution Agreement at http://www.android.com/us/developer-distribution-agreement.html (“Non-Compete. You may not use the Market to distribute or make available any Product whose primary purpose is to facilitate the distribution of Products outside of the Market.”).

14 In AT&T’s only prior experience with Apple in the wireless market – a three-party alliance with Motorola to develop and market the iTunes-enabled ROKR – the end product received significant criticism. See Michael Mace, Motorola Rokr: Instant Failure, Mobile Opportunity (Nov. 2005) at http://mobileopportunity.blogspot.com/2005/11/motorola-rokr-instant- failure.html; Frank Rose, Battle for the Soul of the MP3 Phone, Wired (Nov. 2005) at http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/13.11/phone.html?pg=1&topic=phone&topic_set=.

15 In other countries where the iPhone is offered at similarly attractive price points, some wireless providers expressly prohibit customers from using VoIP while others impose surcharges on customers that use VoIP. See Orange Mobile Terms of Service § 6.4 at http://sites.orange.fr/ge/content/pdf/v2_pdf/documentation/Conditions_generales_abonnement.pdf; DT Replaces VoIP ban with surcharge, Telegeography (June 4, 2009) at http://www.telegeography.com/cu/article.php?article_id=28749.

Review: iTie and Tie-A-Tie — learn to tie neckties on your iPhone

I suspect that most of the readers of this website already know how to tie a tie, but just in case you forget, there’s an app for that on the iPhone.  Actually, there are at least two:  iTie and Tie-A-Tie.

iTie

iPhone developer Karl Klostermann of Lab48 in Munich, Germany developed the free iPhone app iTie.  It includes instructions for five different knots, so even if you have been tying ties for decades, you might learn something new.  The app includes Four-in-hand, Half Windsor, Double Tie, Oriental and Onassis.  For each knot, you get illustrated step-by-step instructions that you can have play automatically as a slide show or you can just manually advance through each screen.

The illustrations are nicely done and easy to understand.  On the options screen, you can choose how quickly you want the steps to appear in automatic play mode (from 3 to 8 seconds per slide), and you can choose to flip the orientation.

This app is bare bones simple, but it does exactly what it needs to do, and hey, it’s free.  Although I did not check it out, if you want to splurge and spend $1.99 you can buy the premium version which adds more knots:  Full Windsor, Pratt, St. Andrew, Atlantic, Italian, Diagonal-Right and, for those nights you want to go out on the town, the Bow Tie.

Tie-A-Tie

Another set of tie-tying iPhone apps comes from AppsCode.  The free version of the app, called Tie-A-Tie Lite, only includes a single knot, the Windsor.  Like iTie, Tie-A-Tie includes nice drawings of each of the steps to tie a tie.  But for each step in Tie-A-Tie, you can also see a photograph of a person tying a tie, which is a nice addition.

The app also gives you some basic information on the knot, another nice feature:

Again, I only looked at the free version, but if you want more features, you can purchase Tie-A-Tie Deluxe for $0.99 and get seven different knots:  Windsor, Half Windsor, Four-in-Hand, Small Knot, Cross Knot, Pratt and Bow Tie.

Tie a Tie and Tie a Tie Pro

I know that I said that there were two iPhone apps to teach you to tie a tie, but I also see two more in the App Store.  One is called Tie a Tie from Pocket Fun Inc ($0.99).  The description says that it shows you not only how to tie 13 different knots but also how to fold a handkerchief into six different pocket squares.  However, I can’t seem to find a website for the developer, and each of the nine different apps sold by Pocket Fun Inc. links to a different website, none of which appear to be connected to the iPhone apps or Pocket Fun Inc.  The other app is called Tie a Tie Pro ($0.99) from NBR-Soft, and the description says that it shows you how to tie 10 different knots.  Once again, I don’t see a website for this app, but here the fault might be mine; the link on iTunes is to a Chinese website that does appear to have something to do with iPhone apps, but I don’t see any reference to Tie a Tie Pro in English and I cannot read the Chinese.  In light of my confusion finding developers for these apps, I did not take a look at either one of them.

Tying it all up

Now that we’re covered with tying a tie, what we really need is an
iPhone app that fixes that broken button that you discover when you are
already running late to work and only have one clean shirt left because the
others are waiting for you at the cleaners.  I would definitely pay for
the premium version of that app.

Click here to get iTie (free):  iTie - Krawattenknoten

Click here to get iTie Premium ($1.99):  iTie Premium - Krawattenknoten

Click here to get Tie-A-Tie (free):  Tie-a-Tie Lite

Click here to get Tie-A-Tie Deluxe ($0.99):  Tie-a-Tie Deluxe

iPhone soap

MeiLin Chan of Boston, MA graduated with honors in Psychology and Business
Administration from the University of California at Berkeley, but her
passion is making fun soaps, which she sells through her company Two
Eggplants (website here and also on Etsy).  She has come up with a whole line of iPhone soaps in different scents ranging from Kahlua
Cafe-O-Lait to Buttery Croissant to Macintosh Apple, and they all look
very cute.  For only $7.99 each, it’s a fun gift for the iPhone lover in your life, or perhaps a gift to yourself.  She has a ton of other interesting soaps too; check our her product listings and you’ll find it hard not to smile.

   

AmLaw article: Is the iPhone Ready for Law Firms?

Alan Cohen writes an interesting article dated today for The American Lawyer titled “Is the iPhone Ready for Law Firms?”  Cohen quotes law firm IT directors at firms where lawyers have been using iPhones for a while, and other IT directors who were reluctant to let their attorneys use iPhones before iPhone Software 3.0 and the iPhone 3GS because of security concerns, some of whom are still cautious today.  “Tech directors who have already embraced the iPhone say it’s ready, now
more than ever. Those who haven’t say that even with its enhancements,
the platform still isn’t quite there yet. Our verdict: The pro-iPhone group is starting to make the better case.”  Cohen also includes a few short quotes from me.  The article is an interesting follow up to a similar article that Cohen wrote seven months ago on iPhones in law firms.

Law firm IT directors are right to be conservative when it comes to security, and I would agree that the original iPhone released in 2007 was not ready for law firms.  But Apple has added important improvements to the iPhone to ensure that it works well in a corporate environment, and I have no doubt that today the iPhone is ready for law firms.  When you consider how much power the iPhone puts in the hands of lawyers, law firms that don’t allow their attorneys to use iPhones are putting their attorneys at a competitive disadvantage.

In the news

DataViz has been promising a Documents to Go app on the iPhone that would be able to edit Microsoft Excel files since March of 2008.  On September 21, 2009, DataViz finally submitted to Apple the 2.0 version of Documents to Go, and yesterday (10 days later) the update to the app showed up in the App Store.  Editing Excel files isn’t as important for most attorneys as editing Word files, but I’m happy to see that this feature has finally arrived.  I’ll let you know how it works once I have had a chance to use it for a while, and if you want to check out the app yourself click here for the $9.99 version and click here for the $14.99 version that works with Exchange e-mail.  Other notable iPhone news of the week:

  • It was recently discovered that, this past July, Apple purchased a company called Placebase which was a competitor to Google Maps.  One of the ways that this was discovered is someone checked out the LinkedIn page of Placebase founder Jaron Waldman and saw that he now says that he works for the “Geo Team” at Apple.  Interesting; I didn’t know that Apple had a Geo Team.  AppleInsider speculates that Apple could be building a Google Maps competitor.  I suppose that is possible, but it seems just as likely to me that Apple sees the increasing importance of location-based services on devices like the iPhone and Apple bought the company so that Waldman and his team would bring their experience to help Apple on these initiatives.  For example, I’m sure that you know that the Maps app on the iPhone works with Google Maps, but did you know that it was Apple, not Google, who wrote that app?
  • If you have a Mac with a TV tuner and the EyeTV software, you can record over the air TV shows on your Mac to watch later.  MacNN reports that with the new EyeTV app, you can also stream that video to your iPhone.  It sounds neat, and reminds me of the SlingPlayer Mobile app that streams video from your television to the iPhone.
  • iPhone owners in Switzerland who purchased the a traffic monitoring app called mogoRoad were surprised to get phone calls from the developer encouraging them to pay for an upgrade to the app.  Apparently the app sends the user’s phone number to the developer so that he can give you a call to ask for more money.  Sounds a little creepy to me.  Art of the iPhone speculates that this violates Apple’s rules and that the app won’t last long.
  • I recently wrote about the AT&T MicroCell device that can use your internet connection to improve your 3G cell phone service.  The device was first released in Charlotte, NC, and AppleInsider reports that the service is now available in Raleigh, NC.  The service will eventually come to more cities, but apparently the rate of expansion is limited by complicated rules in other cities on complying with local 911 requirements.
  • And finally, I’ll admit that I’m a sucker for iPhone 3GS augmented reality apps.  I don’t own any yet, but I enjoy reading about them.  The latest one to catch my eye is Cyclopedia, and it is a neat idea.  You just hold up your iPhone 3GS to look at the world around you and the app provides links to Wikipedia entries that correspond to what you are seeing.  A video explains it better than I can, so click here to see the developer’s website and the included video.  Click here to get Cyclopedia ($1.99): 
    Cyclopedia

An App for Everything

Apple has been running its “there’s an app for that” television commercial campaign for some time now.  (You can see all of them on Apple’s website.)  Apple now has a section of its website titled Apps for Everything which includes nicely designed pages showing you the apps that are useful for Cooks, Keeping Current, the Great Outdoors, Music, Work, Students, Moms and Dads, Working Out, Going Out, Managing Money, Traveling and Fun and Games.

What, no page for lawyers?  Actually, the Work page identifies many apps that lawyers would find useful, such as Quickoffice, Cisco WebEx Meeting Center, Nexonia Expenses and others.

Like everything that Apple does, these pages have generated discussion and even controversy.  For example, Roy Furchgott, who covers smartphones for the New York Times and writes a weekly column that recommends iPhone apps, wrote an article titled “Is that a recommendation, or an ad?” in which he wonders whether developers paid Apple to be listed on this new page.  I actually doubt that these are ads.  I have seen developers write in the past that they were surprised to see their apps featured in a TV commercial or the icon for their app displayed at an Apple Store.  Apparently, Apple has the right to use any images that it wants from an iPhone app without seeking prior permission from a developer, not that most developers would object to the free publicity.  For this reason, I suspect that these developers were surprised, albeit tickled, to see their apps featured on these pages.

With over 85,000 apps, it is increasingly difficult to find the good ones.  Even though relatively few apps are identified, it is always helpful to have some good apps pointed out.  So if you consider yourself a person who likes to work, cook, go out, travel, etc., take a look at Apple’s new page.  You just might find an app that you like.

iPhone apps top 2 billion sold, 85,000 available

Yesterday, Apple announced that there are now 85,000 apps in the app store
and over two billion iPhone apps have been sold (although, of course, many apps are free).  Apple said that more than half
a billion apps were downloaded in the last three months alone.  Indeed, it has
been less than three weeks since Apple announced
that there were over 75,000 apps and 1.8 billion downloads.  A little history to put this in perspective:

  • 7/10/08:  App Store opens
  • 7/14/08:  10 million apps sold; 800 apps available  (Apple PR)
  • 9/9/08:  100 million apps sold; 3,000 apps available. (Apple PR)
  • 10/22/08:  200 million apps sold; 5,550 apps available  (Macworld)
  • 12/5/08:  300 million apps sold; 10,000 apps available  (iPhone J.D.)
  • 1/16/09:  500 million apps sold; 15,000 apps available  (iPhone J.D.)
  • 3/17/09:  800 million apps sold; 25,000 apps available  (Macworld)
  • 4/24/09:  1 billion apps sold; 35,000 apps available  (Apple PR)
  • 7/14/09:  1.5 billion apps sold; 65,000 apps available  (Apple PR)
  • 9/28/09:  2 billion apps sold; 85,000 apps available  (Apple PR)

And because a picture is worth 1,000 words:

The growth in apps is nothing short of astonishing.  When the App Store opened in July of 2008, I don’t think that anyone honestly thought that there would be 2 billion apps sold barely more than a year later.  And we still have a few months left in 2009, including the holiday buying season.  How long will it take to hit 3 billion apps downloaded?