Application Developers

Developers Blog: Archive for July, 2009

Apple App Store Recap 7/17/2009

July 30th, 2009 – by Maggie Taylor

This week in iPhone apps yielded a couple of interesting new apps that provide some helpful new tools for iPhone users.

iSunBurn by Monika Morris provides you the UV index for any location in the United States. Either enter which location you are interested in manually or allow the app to access your current location to receive a quick update of your area’s UV index. iSunBurn helps turn the guessing game of sun tanning into a predictable science for beach goers this summer.

Community Leash by Shawn Grant lets pet owners everywhere band together to help each other locate lost pets. Users are alerted to lost pets close to their location. They can also upload pictures of their own lost pets to the community or even use their iPhone camera to take photos of other potentially lost pets.

By Amir Shaikh

Apple App Store Recap 7/10/09

July 24th, 2009 – by Maggie Taylor

This week in iPhone apps took us back to basics with a traditional turn-by-turn navigation app, an extensive weather app, and a community based travel guide app.

MobileNavigator North America by Navigon AG has been long awaited by turn-by-turn navigation iPhone fans. This app charges a one time fee of $69.99 instead of requiring a regular subscription fee like other navigation apps have decided to charge. It comes preloaded with NAVTEQ’s latest maps and offers both 2-D and 3-D map views while driving.

CloudBurst by Advenio strives to become your one stop destination for all things weather. This app gives you the basics (current temperature, wind, visibility) well enough but it really shines with a current weather radar picture and four day forecast available on the same screen. And thanks to iPhone location you don’t even have to type out your zip code.

Keeping in the spirit of weather, Dopplr - The Social Atlas, by Dopplr brings the popular online Dopplr community to the iPhone. Dopplr is essentially a collaborative travel guide where users can recommend any new discoveries they made while traveling to the rest of the Dopplr community. With the Dopplr app for iPhone the worldly traveler can stay truly mobile as they explore new places and discover new attractions.

By Amir Shaikh

iPhone App Store Recap 7/3/09

July 20th, 2009 – by Maggie Taylor

This week in iPhone apps has something for everyone; a location based to-do list for the forgetful among us, a mobile driving coach for the bad driver in the next lane (because it definitely isn’t us), and a logbook app to help sea travelers keep track of their journeys.

To-Do List.Propelled
by Transistor Studios is another example of interesting apps that have been branded by recognizable companies to serve as both a useful application and a marketing vehicle. This app stands out because it takes your regular “to do” list to a whole new level. Input something you need to get done and To-Do List.Propelled will churn out what places you should visit and in what order you should visit them, based on your location, with the goal of having you spend the least amount of time possible on your errands.

Bliss Trek by MaxQData is a quirky app that both records your driving statistics (ie distance traveled, average speed, etc) and coaches you, while you’re driving, on how to adjust your driving habits to save gas and reduce pollution. Its unique visual style, combined with its intriguing function, is sure to make this app catch a few eyes.

JourSail
by Medienkonzepte GbR is an attractive logbook app designed to catalogue every step of your maritime journey. This is the app to get for the summer sailor looking towards open waters for a new adventure. You can define exactly how often you’d like to enter a new log. Each log contains important information about our trip like nautical miles traveled, compass bearing, and current location of log entry. Keep an entry of every major part of your trip and walk your friends through your time at sea afterwards.

By Amir Shaikh

Skyhook July Report Reveals Bulk Apps Responsible for Q2 App Store Growth

July 15th, 2009 – by Maggie Taylor

Skyhook released its monthly Location Aware App Review this week, analyzing Apple’s App Store, Google’s Android Marketplace, Blackberry App World, Nokia’s Ovi Store and the Palm App Catalog.  The report reveals some interesting trends regarding pricing in the stores, and focuses on the Apple and Android stores specifically as they are the longest running of the bunch.

Check out this GigaOm article detailing the “dirty little secrets” we discovered here.  This article discusses the most interesting trend we discovered, the release of mass produced “Bulk Apps” in the Apple App Store.  Bulk Apps are template-based apps sold at the same price, all having the same look and feel but with swapped out content.  These Bulk Apps caused significant growth in the total number of LBS apps in Q2 of this year.  One developer sold over 850 travel apps based around the same template, but with different content based on specific cities.

About 1/3 of Apple LBS apps are these mass-produced local search or travel suite apps.  There are over 65,000 apps in the Apple App store, but it is important to understand that bulk apps play a big role in this volume.

Skyhook will continue to monitor the Bulk Apps in the upcoming months across all of the app stores, to see if the trend catches on.  We are already starting to see Bulk Apps in the Android Marketplace, though none yet in the LBS category.  It will be interesting to see in August if the newer stores choose to model themselves more closely to the Apple Store in hopes on garnering the same success.

July’s report can be accessed here.

Skyhook Partners with Where is My Android App by Kijiten

July 15th, 2009 – by Maggie Taylor

Skyhook teamed up with yet another Android app this week, Where is My Android (WIMA), by French-based company Kijiten.  WIMA is a device recovery app that allows users to follow in real time their lost or stolen mobile phone on Google Maps wherever they are, even if they can’t use the internet. Version 1.0 also permits the control of the phone from the company’s website: a user can make the phone automatically take photos and record sounds of its surrounding area.

The partnership is significant.  Every app that adds Skyhook exposes more and more developers to the technology and shows them the potential of Skyhook on their own apps.  It also shows that small developers are more willing to incur extra costs and development time for Skyhook technology than to suffer the flawed native Android location.  We are excited to expand our exposure on the Android platform, and help to bring the best location possible its unique LBS apps.

iPhone App Store Recap 6/26/09

July 9th, 2009 – by Maggie Taylor

Looking for summer love but too intimidated at the thought of approaching someone new? The App Store has you covered with new location based dating apps this week to help you break the ice and meet that special someone.

eyeFlirt by Logia Group is a sleek dating application that finds potential significant others based on your own preferences. The app quickly finds close by matches and allows you to text, chat, and, if things go well, meet with them without having to worry about the awkward introductions.

Aloha! Dating Lite is the free version of the popular Aloha Dating app by David Atherton. Like the paid version, this app allows you to create a dating profile and finds nearby matches. You can easily browse close by user’s profiles as you decide who sounds just right for you. After that all you have to do is share your contact info and hope they feel the same way.

Just in case you find yourself happily in the friend zone, the Top Friends app by Slide, Inc. allows you to keep track of your friends in one convenient app. Without having to deal with the clutter of your contacts list or other social networks, Top Friends lets you add only your closest friends so you can share your location, text each other, call, and email without leaving the application.

By Amir Shaikh

iPhone App Store Recap 6/19/09

July 6th, 2009 – by Maggie Taylor

This week in iPhone apps was all about creativity. These three applications highlight that creativity and may give a hint at the diverse future of location-based services.

Join Me by Mobya allows users to track anyone they’re waiting for in real time. Now keeping track of friends and loved ones finally becomes simple with info like the estimated time of arrival, current speed, and total remaining distance of the individual en route are all available though your iPhone.

For the old school gamers out there, the ultimate fantasy has finally come true as Mario Life by Vyacheslav Bushtruk adds elements from the famous Mario franchise into the real world. By marking the location of virtual coins, mushrooms, and princesses on a map of your current location, Mario Life creates a new Mario experience where the player literally has to go on a journey in order to save the princess.

You R Here by LongTrek allows you to take a photo of any map board and plot your location directly on the photo. Map boards are found in the front of parks, trailheads, and tourist areas and often have information labeled on them that Google Maps does not. With You R Here you can take that detailed map with you as a photo and still use your iPhone’s location technology to find your current location on the map.

By Amir Shaikh