Posts Tagged ‘native apps’

Everything iCafe: OnLive Will Let You Use Word, Powerpoint, Excel on iPad

Friday, January 13th, 2012

Its a known fact that there are simply no native apps from Microsoft for their most popular Office tools; Word, Powerpoint and Excel.  While Apple does have their version of each in the App Store (Pages, Keynote, and Numbers), the conversion from one to the other is not always pretty and they really cannot be used interchangeably without expecting some loss of fidelity.  OnLive is a soon to be new app which will give you access to a virtual version of Windows 7 for free, complete with Word, Powerpoint, and Excel all installed and ready for you to use on your iPad.  Read on for more!

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You’re Not Dreaming: Google Voice Apps Return to the iPhone

Monday, September 20th, 2010

GV Mobile+

It was an exciting weekend for Google Voice fans who use the iPhone, with not one but two native apps back in the App Store after being unceremoniously outlawed by Apple more than a year ago.

TechCrunch is reporting that developer Sean Kovacs has made a triumphant return to the iOS platform with GV Mobile+, an updated version of the Google Voice client that was dumped from the platform last year. The app was made available again late Saturday night, a byproduct of the new, looser App Store guidelines that Apple recently put in place.

GV Mobile+ is a front-end client for the free Google Voice service, which essentially allows you to have “one number for life” and route those calls to multiple phones (be they landlines or cell-based), including SMS, voicemail and more. After being dumped by Apple, the app found a new home on Cydia, where it has continued to be updated for users with jailbroken devices. But now it’s back where it belongs, in the App Store.

Apple must also be feeling extra generous to Google Voice users, since GV Mobile+ actually wasn’t the first such app to return to the App Store this past week -- on Friday, a new app called GV Connect from developer Andreas Amann actually beat Kovacs to the punch, although GV Mobile+ is the better-known app given its troubled history, which has been widely documented in the tech press.

As you may recall, GV Mobile+ and a competing app from Riverturn called VoiceCentral were both available for sale prior to July, 2009. When Google submitted their own Voice app to Apple, it was effectively banned from the App Store, and the two third-party solutions were banished as well. To this day it’s still not clear what happened, since none of the apps actually broke any App Store rules; TechCrunch and many others have been left to assume that the Google Voice clients simply got “caught in the crossfire of the growing rivalry between Apple and Google.”

Whatever the reason, we now have two native Google Voice clients available for the iPhone, and a third solution has been available for months as well in the form of Riverturn’s VoiceCentral Black Swan, which is essentially a souped-up HTML5 bookmarklet that circumvents the App Store entirely and does a fine job of offering Google Voice functionality on its own terms. Riverturn claims that they will likely revise and resubmit their own native VoiceCentral app in the near future.

GV Mobile+ and GV Connect are each $2.99 and both offer similar functionality; neither app currently offers push notifications for SMS text messages, but Kovacs plans to implement them in GV Mobile+ with a future update. A free Google Voice account is required to use either app.

Now the real question is, where is Google’s own, official Voice app? After being denied a spot in the App Store and sparking an infamous FCC inquiry last year, the app remains a no-show. Google only offers the following non-statement: “We currently offer Google Voice mobile apps for Blackberry and Android, and we offer an HTML5 web app for the iPhone. We have nothing further to announce at this time.”

Follow this article’s author, J.R. Bookwalter on Twitter

Dictionary, New Spell Checking Comes to iPad

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010
finger-menu.jpg

The recently released iPad Guided Tour videos reveal that Apple has indeed included a full English dictionary in the iPad as well as new spell checking options, neither of which are available on the iPhone or iPod Touch. Added to the copy and paste menu is a new "replace" menu, which offers a number of similar words you could use. Keep in mind this doesn't work like a Thesaurus, the words offered are similar in spelling, not meaning. Some apps, such as iBooks and Pages, also offer a "dictionary" menu item which pops up the definition of the selected word in a pop-up next to the word. The guide videos frequently mention the use of the "built-in dictionary," which seems to indicate that this will be available in all native apps, not just the new iWork applications.


A Look at the iPhone Games Made with Mono Touch

Saturday, March 13th, 2010

GameWeek

We took some time to talk with the developers at Mono Touch to discuss their software that allows developers to create iPhone native apps from C# and .NET based apps. The app helps independent and big time developers deliver games and applications to the mobile device by offering the tools to code apps that utilize the iPhone's operating system. Recently, Mono Touch also released support for the iPad SDK.

This sofware is available for the average coding consumer and is free to try. Check out our video below to see three apps developed using Mono Touch.

 

 

Apple Announces iPad, Starts at $499, Available in Late March, Has WiFi+3G

Thursday, January 28th, 2010
apple-creation-0097-rm-eng.jpg

Today Apple announced their highly anticipated tablet, dubbed the iPad. It'll be available in 60 days and it comes in several size configurations, with the 16GB base-model costing $499. It includes 802.11n wireless networking, a 9.7" multi-touch screen, speakers, microphone, Bluetooth, accelerometer, and compass. It appears to run a modified version of the iPhone OS, presumably iPhone OS 3.2. It'll run current iPhone apps without modification, although an SDK has been announced to build native apps. Additionally, Apple will roll out a WiFi+3G model which will include 3G connectivity and GPS. The WiFi+3G model will cost an additional $130, although it'll be unlocked and service will cost $15 for 250MB of bandwidth per month or $30 for unlimited data. 3G will be provided by AT&T in the states with no contract.

Additional details and photos below. Additional details will be posted here as we get them!

How You’ll Get Google Voice-like Features on Your iPhone

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

VoiceCentral Black Swan

 


If you're an iPhone-loving Google Voice user, you're probably lamenting the absence of any native apps available to use the service with your device. Maybe you're even glancing jealously upon your Android-touting bretheren, all with their own native Google Voice application.

Well, covet your brothers no more, for your prayers have been answered! There's an app that acts just like that! But, don't go looking in Apple's App Store, because Riverturn's VoiceCentral Black Swan (currently in beta) is a new kind of "weblication" that taps into the power of Google Voice in a whole unique way. We were able to get in on the beta process and give MacLife.com readers a first look at the innovative new software, which basically brings Google Voice's coveted features to your iPhone without any gimmicks. Read on to find out more.

So, What is Black Swan?

VoiceCentral Black Swan is the next generation of Riverturn's former VoiceCentral app, which was removed by Apple from the App Store (along with a couple of competing apps) following a controversial rejection of Google's own Voice app submission (more on that in a moment). Black Swan is unique because it totally bypasses the App Store, as well as the need to jailbreak your device (which is currently the only way to run competitor Sean Kovacs' GV Mobile). Riverturn has taken the HTML5, JavaScript and client-side database abilities of Mobile Safari and mixed in their own “middleware” layer powered by the Google App Engine. The result is an extremely streamlined Google Voice app that looks and acts almost exactly like the real thing, yet allows immediate upgrades without having to use iTunes or Apple's proprietary App Store.

What Does it Do?

Almost everything that the Google Voice website allows, including placing calls through Voice, browsing your recent call history, listening to your voicemail, read & send free SMS messages and review your billing & transaction history. You can even use the service offline to browse your contacts, call history, voicemail and SMS messages (although listening to voicemails still requires a data connection).

How Do I Install it Without the App Store?

Black Swan add to homeBlack Swan installerInstalling Black Swan is a snap: You simply go to an installer website, add the resulting “weblication” to your home screen and then click to open it like any other app. Enter your Google Voice login & password information, select your desired callback number from the ones already set up in your account, and you’re ready to go.

How Does it Work?

The app will automatically refresh your recent calls, SMS messages and voicemail. You’re given the option in the app’s settings to auto-refresh this information every 15, 30, 45, 60 or 120 minutes, or never. The settings page also gives you easy access to helpful instructions and an FAQ from Riverturn, how many history items to fetch from the server (up to 50, in increments of 10) and it also shows a running tally of your Google Voice billing credit.

In order to play your voicemails, click the arrow to the left of the caller’s name and Black Swan opens the audio in a standard Quicktime player on your device. Click the blue arrow on the right and you’re taken to details of the call (date, time & length) as well as the option to call or SMS the contact back via the iPhone or Voice. You even have the option to display your own Notes about the call as well as the Transcript, although neither of those are editable from the device itself. Recent calls show the same details, sans the Transcript option, of course.

Black Swan SMSClick on an SMS from within the app and you’re taken to a familiar iChat-style bubble of your conversation, just like the stock iPhone Messages app. Click on the button in the upper left to create a new SMS message, then click the “+” button to add your contact (or type one in yourself).

It’s here where Black Swan faces its biggest obstacle: Because the app is really a souped-up bookmarklet and not a true app created with the SDK, it can’t access your device contacts. Thankfully, the folks at Riverturn have addressed this shortcoming as best they can, by using the Voice service itself to import your Google address book. If you happen to use Mac software such as Spanning Sync, you can easily sync (and automatically update) your Mac Address Book with your Google contacts and vice versa. You can also use iTunes 7.7 or later to sync in a similar way, although it’s not quite as streamlined.

 

A Few Caveats

The biggest downside to Black Swan’s use of Google contacts is actually a fault with Google -- rather than the option to sort your contacts by last name as the Mac Address Book and iPhone Contacts allow, everything is sort by first name only, which will produce a few frustrating moments for iPhone users used to having them the other way around. Also, because this not a true SDK-developed app, the earpiece of your device is off-limits, so voicemails can only be played back through the speaker or headphone jack. (Calls are not a problem, since Google Voice is actually a callback service and not VoIP.)

Besides those two caveats, VoiceCentral Black Swan -- even in its present beta form -- works great and delivers as promised. It installed quickly and easily on both our first-gen iPhone as well as our iPhone 3GS, and in most cases seemed even a bit faster at pulling data from Google’s servers than the competing GV Mobile + jailbreak-only app.

A Controversial Beginning

Google Voice was born in 2006 as a free, web-based service called GrandCentral, giving users a new telephone number capable of ringing multiple phone numbers at once -- home, cell, work, you name it -- and even lets you take a call at one number, then shift it seamlessly over to another (for instance, from home phone to cell phone) so you can continue the call on the go, uninterrupted. The service promised “one number for life,” including a unified voicemail box, call screening and much more.

Google VoiceGoogle purchased GrandCentral in July, 2007 and it seemed for some time that nothing would be done with it -- until 21 months later, when the service relaunched as Google Voice (free, but currently available by invitation only). Among the many new features added to the Voice service were voicemail transcription, free calls in the U.S. & Canada and cheap international calls.

However, like GrandCentral before it, the Google Voice service itself was still tied to a website, and despite a respectable attempt at a mobile version of the site, it was clear that a dedicated iPhone app would make the service even more worthwhile.

VoiceCentralThat’s where third-party App Store developers came in. For whatever reason, Apple allowed a handful of third-party Google Voice apps in the App Store for months prior to Google attempting to release their own version, which was promptly rejected. But after rejecting Google Voice from the App store, Apple began pulling all the third-party apps, resulting in a veritable firestorm of controversy -- as well as a pending FCC investigation -- that’s been well documented in the media.

Thankfully, independant developers have since managed to figure out a way to bypass Apple's stringent App Store approval process by writing an application that could be used through the iPhone's native web browser. Finally, a way to put that Google Voice invitation to good use. Our only hope is that Black Swan is here to stay, though it's obviously a temporary solution to a bigger issue. 

Well, this all sounds pretty awesome. When will Black Swan be available?

Riverturn’s beta program for Black Swan is currently limited, but promises to open up to more users throughout January and February. If you’re a Google Voice user who doesn’t want to jailbreak your device and is tired of waiting for Apple to get its act together, head over to the Riverturn website and sign up for beta access. While there’s no word yet on what the service may eventually cost, for now the beta is an excellent peek into the future of how developers may get around some of the App Store approval nightmares, and an extremely capable Google Voice app to boot.