Friday, September 17, 2010

Time Lapse Photo Journal - On Sale Now

New Release Today: Time Lapse Photo Journal, on the iTunes App Store.

The Time Lapse Photo Journal App allows iPhone and iPod touch users to create Photo Journals of their lives, by adding photos of themselves or loved ones, and then playing back the photos they take over the weeks, months or years, as Time Lapse video slideshows.

Videos can be uploaded to Facebook & YouTube to share with friends.

Create Photo Journals for each person or subject. (ie self portrait, child, spouse, pet, diet program, home remodel.) Add photos to each over regular intervals, days, weeks, or months. As each photo is added, crop and use the guides to align to a grid or to the last photo. App can be used to track changes over time. Children growing up. Faces as they change over the years. Growth of pets and plants. Even home remodels as work is being performed.

App uses advance iOS 4.0 features, such as auto-save and restore, as well as local Push Notification reminders. Push notification reminders can be set for each Journal at regular intervals, so user never forgets to take a new shot. Playback the photos as slideshow movies. Adjust the playback speed for each Journal. Upload and share the videos on Facebook and Youtube, or email directly to a friend.

Device Requirements:
* iPhone, or iPod touch Compatible
* Requires iOS 4.0 or later

Pricing and Availability:
Time Lapse Photo Journal is $1.99 USD (or equivalent amount in other currencies) and available worldwide exclusively through the
App Store in the Photography category.

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Zombie Sniper is a full-on gore-fest. AppCraver

Thanks to AppCraver for reviewing our game, Adv of the Zombie Sniper!

Zombie Sniper is a full-on gore-fest. It’s just a sniper game, with Zombies instead of terrorists – but that makes all the difference. When you have 3D Lego figures made of meat and bones to work with instead of balaclava-wearing cut-outs, the whole sniping genre reaches new heights. Super-intuitive touch controls make the game easy to start playing, a generous assortment of weapons and upgrades keeps you playing, and the sound effects are, well, to die for.”

In the
AppStore.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Adv of Zombie Sniper Review on MobileTechReview.com

Thanks to Mobile Tech Review for reviewing our game, Adv of the Zombie Sniper!

“Adv of Zombie Sniper is a fun shooter game that can put on a frantic show through your sniper scope. The gameplay feels beefy with 40 levels, 4 weapons and 12 upgrades. The 3D graphics are eye-catching with Lego animation style modeling and variety of backgrounds. Touch controls are easy to use. The game is definitely worth the price of admission.

In the AppStore.

Monday, June 21, 2010

AppMockup Updated is out. Make your own app for that!

New AppMockup Update 1.1 is out.

Many new and improved features & refinements, including:
-Corner points to drag enlarge or shrink objects. (Also helps align objects.)
-New Scroll wheel picker item.
-Simple one button page duplication.
-Two new advanced mockup examples.
-Bug fixes.
-Speed/performance optimizations.

Make your own “APP FOR THAT!”

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Ordering an iPhone 4? Servers down!

I’ve been trying to order a new iPhone 4 all morning, and after hours of trying, the servers are still down...

Friday, May 7, 2010

DA RELOAD: Sniper Trainer Released

Just Released: Distant Assassin is back & Reloaded with Sniper Trainer.

*****
Sniper Challenge Game Mode is included, free.

Your mission is simple, find your target in a crowd, scroll around with your finger. Then zoom in and shoot! If you miss, your reward will decrease. And if you hit an innocent person, you will be penalized. As the levels progress, the difficulty increases, the crowds get faster.

****
Also includes all new Practice Mode. Slow pace practice to get familiar with the game.

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Monday, March 22, 2010

AppMocker Released

After months of negotiations with Apple's AppStore approval department, AppMocker is finally available in the iTunes App Store!

Get the app while it's still available!

The ultimate prototyping tool.

Change the name, add an icon image, edit the background, add clickable buttons which load other pages you create.
Add text input fields which allow you to enter text in playback mode.
Easily test different layouts to create the best user experience.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

The death of Mac OS X

The days of Mac OS X is numbered. The writing is on the wall. With the introduction of the iPad, running a larger iPhone OS, it's clear where Apple is going with this.

iPhone OS is the replacement for Mac OS X.

But, you say, iPhone OS doesn't have all the features of Mac OS X?
If you remember the transition from OS 9 to OS X, you remember how many features were missing? They slowly added them back in over the next releases.
In this same way they are going to have iPhone OS running on every mac, macbook, iMac etc.

Remember DOS? And the command line? If we call that difficulty of 10, on a relative scale of 1 to 10, and you could say Windows was a 8, and Mac OS X was 6, then iPhone OS is like a 2. It's that much easier for the common person to use.

Why is the system so closed? Why does Apple reject so many apps? Why have such a closed system?
Simple. They want simplicity. Each developer is given a manual, with required reading, that has nothing to do with real programming, called the Human Interface Guidelines. This document does a wonderful job of creating a unified system of layout and controls for your applications.
Some developers do not read this. Some try to make their own way of doing things. This would result in an inconsistent user experience. Imagine… if someone made a Mac OS X program, and they decided that you have to press Control and then click to do what normally just clicking the mouse would do? People would be confused, needlessly.
By laying out a unified system for developers, they are making a super simple and intuitive user experience.

Example: iTunes.
I have many friends that use iTunes. All with varying degrees of computer using knowledge. One time a friend told me how he wished you could burn discs from iTunes, he was tired of having to find the songs, putting them into Toast and burning the discs. He never realized the features were built in.
But iTunes does so much, it's a music store, it's a music organization and listening tool, it's a cd ripper, cd burner, App Store… the list goes on.
Now we have the iPhone OS, which takes it and cuts it up into the iTunes App, iPod App, the App Store.
This sort of simplification, and more focused on task aspect of the iPhone OS apps, make them faster and easier to use.