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My Top 15 iPhone Apps Of 2008

by Jason Wilk on January 1, 2009

top-iphone-apps

  • The App store has been a great success thus far. Although I have gone through my share of downloading and quickly deleting apps that I don’t use more than a few times, there have been 15 that are consistently open on a daily basis, some hourly.
    • Facebook. By far the app I use the most. I constantly update my status, check for notifications and chat throughout the day. Although buggy sometimes, it is my biggest time killer coming out of the app store.
    • MyAnalytics. Since Google has yet to come out with an iPhone app for Google Analytics, this app is the best substitute. Nothing like having a record traffic day and keeping track of it on the go. It takes a little bit of getting used to, since some durations throghout the day it will show you a combination of your current and previous days traffic. I find it to be dead on if I check it from 2pm throughout the day.
    • Shazam. If you don’t have this app yet, I’m surprised. Open up the app, put it next to the song you are listening to and it will tell you who the artist is, where to buy it, what the lyrics are and then stores the info. Hipsters beware, it has trouble picking up on Jason Bentley tracks.
    • BigOven. Sometimes I just need to cook. This is a really nice app that contains thousands of recipes. It has been downloaded welll over 1 million times.
    • Trace. Best game of they year for me. Travel to one of the 5 worlds in the game with your little red character. Trace your own lines around the obstacles and set your own path to success. Must be downloaded to get the full effect. Truly addicting.
    • WritingPad. Similar to note pad but utilizes the latest typing technology, Swype. You don’t need to lift a finger or tap to write a word. Drag your finger through the letters of the word you want to spell and it will recognize it. Great for taking quick notes or impressing your non-tech friends. This is the future of the mobile keyboard.
    • Pandora. The great app produced by the Music Genome phenomenon. Type in an artist or song you want to listen to and it will create a radio station based on similar styles and sounds. Awesome for your car, iPod Dock or walking around.
    • PapiJump. Just about as addicting as Trace. Using the accelerometor, bounce the pink ball to each blue step until you can’t go any further. Just don’t try plaing it in the car. My high score is 46,000.
    • Wurdle. Shake the iPhone and a fresh screen of letters will appear. Try and drag yor finger through possible words and rack up points. Think you did well? Once your time runs out, you will see all the words you missed and feel like an idiot every time.
    • Wordpress. Make a lot of typos like me when you write? Well, make sure you have the Wordpress app so you can correct your grammar on the go. Gives you instant access to your dashboard, where you can add, edit or delete a post.
    • iGolf. I take a sense of pride in this game since I think I may hold the world record. Play a few holes or hit the driving range with this Wii like golf game. Try and avoid playing it in public, people may think you’re nuts.
    • iHunt. Need to take out a little aggression? Just open up this app to go kill some deer or pheasants. Use the accelerometer to aim you shotgun or rifle and shoot away. Such a fun game with great sound effects.
    • Fandango. Movie times/reviews, on the go and fast.
    • CollegeFB. Great app from the nice guys at PlusMo. Keep track of all the college football games on the go. Gives you an updated play by play for each game you click on.
    • UrbanSpoon. The best app for finding a restaurant near where you’re standing. Choose from a variety of genres, pricing options and areas.

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Google’s New Non-Semantic Approach To Personal Search

by Jason Wilk on November 20, 2008

  • Today Google launced SearchWiki, a way for Google users (once-signed in) to customize search by re-ranking, deleting, adding, and commenting on search results.
  • Your comments will be shown to others, however the changes you make to results will only affect your own searches.
  • All of your search changes will be stored in your Google account for future searches. The video above exmplains it quite well.

Google Blog, TechCrunch

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  • Amazon said this morning on their blog that their web services business is doing so well that they are lowering their prices on November 1st.
  • Amazon will still charge 15 cents per gigabyte of storage per month, but after 50 terabytes, the price will fall.
  • “All of this usage drives increasing economies of scale, or lower costs,” writes Amazon’s Jeff Bar
  • S3’s peak usage came Oct. 1, with more than 70,000 storage, retrieval and deletion requests per second.
  • Seems like everyone is using S3 these days.

Amazon Web Service Blog

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To Google, Anonymous = We Still Kinda Know Who You Are

by John Jorgensen on September 12, 2008

  • On Sept. 9th, Google announced they improved their privacy policy by anonymizing users’ IP addresses in their logs after 9 months versus their old policy of 18 months.
  • Recently, CNET’s Chris Soghoian asked Google to explain exactly how they make users anonymous.
  • The answer is discomforting: Google told Chris they remove “some bits” of your IP address after 9 months, and after 18 months they delete the last section of your IP. Oh, and there’s a unique cookie associated with the IP that is never deleted.
  • Crash course – IP addresses look like this: 192.102.155.788. The first 3 sections, or “octets,” tell servers (like Google) a ton about you — where you are geographically and what ISP you’re using to connect, for starters, while the last 3 numbers uniquely identify your specific computer.
  • Google is basically saying after 9 months, they change your IP to 192.102.155.7xx, and after 18 they change it to 192.102.155.xxx. By matching this IP, timestamps, the unique cookie and other easily accesible data, it would be very simple to pinpoint who you are.
  • Tiny commentary: What happened to “Don’t be evil”? Google better get serious about privacy instead of PR, and fast.

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Made tiny from: Mashable.com original post

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