The iPhone (or touch) supports up to 9 screens of apps. That’s 16 apps X 9 screens + 4 in the dock, 148 apps! Don’t let this amazing device go to waste with a measly two or three pages of apps, get to the app store and start downloading these standouts!
Google Maps
Smooth tracking with real-time traffic, high-res satellite and 3D street imagery, and the quickest way to locate and contact yellow page entries.
Turn your iPhone into a mobile web server capable of transferring files wirelessly between other computers on the same network using a browser. [Image]
What better song to play on Cat Piano than the Meow Mix theme song? You know, from those cat food commercials. Mitsy and Ajax heard the meowing and came to investigate and Mitsy adds some of her own meows.
Maybe I’ll become a professional iPhone pianist. I’m well on my way, I recently downloaded Piano Man from the app store. It’s like Guitar Hero but for the Piano, Piano Hero! It’s got some sweet songs like Holst’s Jupiter, Mozart’s Turkish March, and some Beethoven and Bach. Here’s my audition:
There are some really great musical instrument apps for the iPhone. The touch screen has great response and can recognize up to 5 seperate touches at once. There are a bunch of great free piano apps like FreePiano, a drum set called DigiLite, and a flute/guitar collection called Noise Trio. But my favorite musical instrument on the app store combines my two favorite things, meows and pianos.
Here is another Google Earth animation created from GPS data recorded with my iPhone. This time I recorded a 21.5 mile track as I drove on the highway up to Wintergreen. There are 1792 data points in this track, so the animation is smooth. The colorization represents an ascent from 500 to 3200 feet.
While I was happy with the GPS data I recorded during my previous post, I couldn’t help but think that the rich data I had for each point was going to waste. I wanted to use the time stamp to animate my snowboarding track. I also wanted to colorize the track according to the speed I was going. Fortunately, I was able to export my path from Pathtracks.com in a GPX format, which I was then able to convert to an animated, colorized Google Earth file with GPSVisualizer.com. I then uploaded this Google Earth screen capture to YouTube (my first HD YouTube video):
I use the GPS capabilities iPhone a lot, navigating, finding restuarants, but the coolest feature is it’s ability to record GPS tracks. There are 2 apps I use for this, Path Tracker and GPS Tracker. Both of these apps allow you to export the saved data to Google Maps and Google Earth (.kml files). Then you can use Google Earth to make a badass video of the 3D terrain:
Path Tracker is $.99 on the app store and is worth it if you want to record and save your tracks of biking, hiking or whatever. It is very easy to use, just click start path, and when you are done you hit save, and your track is immediatly available on pathtracks.com. The better satellite coverage you have, the more data points your path will have.
Each data point on the path contains handy info like lat/lon, timestamp, and current speed.
It also automatically generates nice speed and elevation graphs.
Path tracker doesn’t require a your phone to have data connection, you can record your track and then save it when you return to coverage. GPS tracker however does require a data connection, because it tracks your movement in real time on Google Maps. You can send your family a link and have them track your progress in real time, you can also save your tracks and export them to Google Maps/Earth like Path Tracker, but it’s not as easy. Path Tracker is specifically designed for recording and sharing paths, GPS tracker is a more general utility, best used when you want a 3rd party to be able to track you in real time over the internet.