About Paul

All around gamer, app junkie, and stand-up guy. Editor on AppSlappy. Co-hosting for the Anhourofsleep and Time-Travelling Robots in Space podcasts.

Bethesda asks for Dragon Shout App take down

A while back I posted a bit about the Dragon Shout App. To recap, it’s designed to keep track of any equipment you have left behind and where you left it. And seriously, that is a really invaluable tool in a world as big as Skyrim. Yesterday, the official Dragon Shout app twitter feed posted that Bethesda has asked for them to take down the application due to copyright infringement, a rather unfortunately turn of events for anyone still using it.


I am reminded a bit of the much higher profile story involving the “Scrolls” name infringing on the “Elder Scrolls” license between Bethesda and Mojang, a case that was resolved amicably with Mojang still being able to use the name. I’m not sure what Bethesda’s specific claim is other than just general infringement, but whatever. The app is still up for the time being, so get it while you can.

AppSlappy #118: Mini Pads? Hmm…

Lost In Translation

There’s this thing you may heard of, the Nike FuelBand. And the AppSlappy team returns to us to discuss it further along with many other apps! Rumor is that there is a new smaller iPad in the works, even though Jobs himself said that it’d never be smaller than the original iPad, but apparently orders are in to make these in China. Tonight we’re taking a look at music creation apps, really good translators, and making education better.

Scott’s Reviews
8bit Ninja - Free Universal on iPhone and iPad –  
SayHi Translate$2.99 Universal on iPhone and iPad - 

Eric’s Reviews
Figure - $0.99 on iPhone and iPad - 
Sonified - $1.99 Universal on iPhone and iPad - 

Eileen’s Reviews
Air Wings - Free Universal on iPhone and iPad - 
Khan Academy - Free on iPad only - 

In other news, the new universal update to Hero Academy looks fantastic. People say that Dwarves and now under-powered with the new Tribes class being overpowered… who’d a thunk?

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Big Game: Mobile Edition

One of the more common practices these days is for a major video game to be released along side a companion iOS app in some form. Whether that be a portable version of the game itself or an app to support different functionality. Just to refresh our collective memory, here’s a quick rundown of some of the more recent releases:

A
A

Burnout CRASH
Call of Duty: Black Ops Zombies
EA Battlelog (Battlefield 3)
Mass Effect 3 Data Pad
Mass Effect Infiltrator
Max Payne Mobile
Minecraft Pocket Edition
Soul Calibur
SSX Ridernet
Star Wars: Old Republic

It’s weird, I almost view these apps akin to the release of a companion video game released along side a major film release. It should be noted that most of these games are consistently in the top paid or free apps on the iOS app store. But the point of this is to get a gauge of how our community feels about them, if anything. How do most people feel about these games? Do you only pick these games up if you enjoy the main game they’re associated with? Usually useless or generally okay?

Creepy App of the Day: Girls Around Me

For anyone interested in dabbling in felony stalking, look no further than the Girls Around Me app. Unfortunately for those folks, as of last Saturday the app has been pulled from the iOS store. Here’s how it works, it uses geolocation to point out “things” of interest to the user, in this case those “things” are “girls”. As you being the app it simply shows a local map with various pictures and locations of men and women of your choosing. You may ask the question, so these people volunteer this information? The answer in an emphatic “No”. It is using any public data from Facebook and Foursquare in order to acquire pictures, gender, and exact location.

So whether it is due to laziness or ignorance, each of these people haven’t really locked down who can see what about themselves publicly. It’s an old topic, but the real problem here is how Facebook and Foursquare chooses to expose it’s API to third-party developers. The developer of Girls Around Me, I-Free, has issued a very long statement regarding this issue to the Wall Street Journal of all places. I pretty much stopped reading when I realized they were trying to justify this thing to everyone, oh wait…

AppSlappy #117: Ever seen paper?

Waterworld

The AppSlappy crew returns to give you another fun-filled episode filled Nike FuelBands, stylus’… (stylusii? What’s the plural there?), and paper discussions. Scott gets angry at Angry Birds, Eric breaks through another dimension, Eileen makes serious travel plans, and more…

Scott’s Reviews
Angry Birds Space$0.99 on iPhone and $2.99 for HD on iPad –  
Action Driver - $0.99 Universal on iPhone and iPad - 

Eric’s Reviews
Dimensions The Game - $2.99 on iPhone and iPad - 
Paper By FiftyThree Free on iPad only ($7.99 for the Essentials) - 
(Swick interpretation of Ericspeak)

Eileen’s Reviews
The Layover$1.99 Universal on iPhone and iPad - 
JetSetter - $4.99 on iPhone and iPad - 

Rumors abound about the next generation of iPhone hitting in June. So for those wanting to upgrade, give it some time rather than springing for the iPhone 4S right away.

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New iPad Battery Issue

True Lies

According to PC World, the new iPad battery actually needs an hour longer charge than the indicator represents. This means that the battery indicator says 100% when it’s actually 90%, which is roughly an hour less of usage. On the other hand, Apple warned users that they should not leave their iPad charging unattended (really?) or charge overnight because it will risk ruining the battery life. Obviously most people believe that Apple should probably fix the battery indicator as well as making the iPad stop charging once the battery is full.

For those with new iPad’s, take care not to overcharge it.

AppSlappy #116: iPadded Show

The new iPad, which is definitely not the iPad 3, is here and crew weighs on what they think so far, Eileen loses her cool publicly for all of humanity to witness over Draw Something, and Eric reviews the coveted Nike Fuel Band, and more!

Scott’s Reviews
Sparrow - $2.99 on iPhone and iPad –  
Azkend 2 HD$3.99 on iPhone and iPad - 

Eric’s Reviews
AaaaaAAaaaAAAaaAAAA!!! - $2.99 Universal on iPhone and iPad - 
Nike Fuel Band - Free on iPhone and iPad - 

(Swick interpretation of Ericspeak)

Eileen’s Reviews
Day One - $1.99 Universal on iPhone and iPad - 
ReadabilityFree Universal on iPhone and iPad - 

Also Sword and Sorcery is on sale, and Instacast is the way to go for all of your podcast management needs.

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Attachment Turns Your iPhone Into A Virtual Wallet

This is definitely one of the cooler ideas I’ve seen recently. This Kickstarter project called Geode is attempting to turn your iPhone and Android device into a virtual wallet. It essentially stores every credit card, gift card, or whatever has a magnetic card strip into your phone that can be used anywhere with card terminals. It’s also claiming to have “biometric” security, which I believe just means using a fingerprint. Which would hopefully eliminate the need to cancel credit cards should the reader be lost or stolen.

These guys aren’t sponsoring us or anything, I just thought it was a sweet idea. With that said, I’m not sure I would trust this with every money spending bridge that I have. Or at least it would take a lot of convincing. With Path and their very public exposure of the misuse of one’s personal information, this thing would need a lot of trust-building for consumers.

So far they’ve gotten almost $48,000 of a $50,000 goal with 38 days left, which probably means that they will easily pass expectations. Anyone out there willing to trust this thing out of the gate? When I think about it, it’s not putting any more trust in this thing than we do our credit card companies… well, all of our credit card companies together. But still…