23 July 2010 ~ 2 Comments

Carless? Public Transportation Apps Help Keep you Mobile

Living in Texas and trying to stay mobile without using a car can be tough. While I have a car, this summer I chose to try commuting to work by bus instead of driving. I initially downloaded the Ride Austin iPhone app as a mobile method to help me conquer public transportation in Austin. My $2.99 investment was worth every penny — I literally would be lost without it.

The app helps you find the closest bus or train stop to your location, shows you the schedule for routes that go by that location, and lets you look at route maps.

Chicago, Portland, and Seattle, among jodi1others, offer apps with real-time bus schedules where each bus is tracked with GPS systems so you know whether your bus is early, late, or right on time. Buster, the Chicago Bus Tracker costs $1.99, while Portland and Seattle’s apps are free.

Acrossair, an app development company, put out augmented reality apps last year for several large cities in which users can find the nearest transit station via their iPhones’ video function. The following is the developer’s description of the New York Nearest Subway app:

“When you load the app, holding it flat, all 33 lines of the New York Subway are displayed in colored arrows. By tilting the phone upwards, you will see the nearest stations: what direction they are in relation to your location, how many miles away they are and what lines they are on. If you continue to tilt the phone upwards, you will see stations further away, as stacked icons.”

In addition to NYC, the $1.jodi299 Acrossair app is available for cities including London, San Francisco, Madrid, Paris and Tokyo. Some cities also have free versions supported by Apple iAds.

See below for an example of the New York app’s interface or watch a short video on the Acrossair’s website.

The Google Maps app that comes pre-loaded on every iPhone has a pretty nifty public transportation feature as well. It allows you to pick your current location, addresses from your contacts’ informatiojodi3n, or a custom insert and then choose directions to there or from there.  You can also choose to depart ‘now’ or select a time in the future, and then are presented with the three routes numbers closest to your departure time, their expected

arrival time, and the total fare for your journey.  Not bad for an app that came with the phone! Hindsight is 20/20, and I wish I’d found out about the capabilities of this app before purchasing Ride Austin.

Here is a screenshot showing the next bus I can take from my office to my apartment.

Going careless can be initially daunting but public transportation apps really helped ease the transition for me.

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29 June 2010 ~ 4 Comments

Mobile Diagnosis

Lately, I’ve become very interested in the push to put mobile devices in the hands of the developing world. Not because I think some kid in a remote village of a third-world country needs to play with Twitter’s new “Places” feature (although they just may want to); it’s because of the promise that lies in what the spread of information and technology could do for bridging the quality-of-life gap.

Photo: Andy Ryan from MIT News

In the next two weeks, a group from UC Davis will compete for the Imagine Cup, a global contest by Microsoft that awards students who create innovative technologies that can help the world. The team’s invention is a software for cell phones that identifies vascular diseases in children by taking a picture of their eye and sending the information to a server for diagnostic testing. The results are then texted back to the phone.

Similar to this, a new device created by MIT’s Media Lab will allow for a simple, on-the-spot, eye exam for refractive errors in vision by way of a cell phone’s camera.

I think this is where mobile needs to develop. Both these technologies create opportunities for low-cost health care to go out into rural locations where other modern medical options aren’t available.

While it’s fun to push the limits with our social networks and digital media, imagine the possibilities from moving mobile into a more practical space where it can address the world’s largest problems – one application at a time.

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18 June 2010 ~ 3 Comments

Smart phones: The modern day binkies

My generation thinks we’re the kids of technology, but children today understand the digital world even better than we did at their age.  Last weekend, my cousin’s four year old daughter, Mycah, was getting fussy while all of the adults were busy chatting over dinner, so I quickly downloaded the Monkey Preschool Lunchbox application and handed over my iPhone to Mycah. MMShe immediately began playing the game with little direction from me. Before I knew it, she had mastered the touch-screen element of the phone and was on her way to winning the game that actually never ends.  Within minutes of seeing her completely engaged in the application, (and fuss-free I might add) both her mom and dad downloaded the application on their phones and Monkey Preschool Lunchbox quickly and easily earned another two dollars. In today’s day and age, smart phones can be used as much more than just devices to make calls, send texts or write emails. Smart phones can, in fact, be used as pacifiers (or as Mycah calls them, binkies). Now if only smart phones could feed the kiddies as well, grocery stores, restaurants and planes would all be quieter places.

For more recommendations on modern day binkies, check out Parenting.com

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13 April 2010 ~ 1 Comment

iPhone’s Application Creativity: Inside the Box

Photo By: Dan Counsell

Photo By: Dan Counsell

Apple has laid down the law with the latest amendments to forge its path of world domination. Okay, it’s not that serious…yet.

Regardless, Apple’s CEO, Steve Jobs, has decided that he is no longer entertaining the idea of compatibility with other codes. Popular tool software, like Adobe’s Flash, will not be accepted as substitute for application generation, per the updates to the iPhone Developer Program License Agreement.

I think this speaks volumes of the company that we have all been seduced into adoring for its quirky advertisements and addictive simplicity. While I see Jobs’ desire to keep his platform progressive and limit the production of “sub-standard apps,” I agree with the application developers who are cursing him for hampering of others’ creativity.

From a marketing standpoint, it’s a risky move. Apple is a company that projects an image of innovation, and yet they are the first to smack down other’s ideas. To me, a person who is soon-to-be in the market for a new cell phone, the iPhone’s allure is its trillions of useful – as well as funky – applications.

If irritating application developers drives that creativity away from Apple, the iPhone might just lose its luster. However, knowing Apple, I’m sure they will continue to push their supremacy down our throats and hold their ground until a device finally has the power to knock ‘em over. For now, though, Jobs’ stubbornness wins again.

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