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Cell Phones, Video Games, iPhone

Kick Your Friends in the Face With 'FaceFighter' iPhone App

Don't even attempt to lie. We know you've daydreamed about how great it would feel to haul off and punch one of your friends in the face or plant a foot right in his or her kisser. Now it may be hard to get away with doing that while hanging out at the bar or at a party -- and still keep them as friends afterwards. But iPhone game developer, Appy Entertainment, understands your desire to commit acts of physical violence against loved ones and has created 'FaceFighter,' which lets you paste the face of friends, family... really just about anyone, on a computerized foe and beat the hell out of them.

Get started by choosing images from your camera roll or taking a new snapshot, then line up your eyes and mouth with the game's guidelines. Zoom in and out to fit the image into a cutout, and you're ready to go. The game is pretty simple -- basically a button masher that lets you kick, block, and throw a right or left punch, leaving your custom opponent bruised, bandaged, and missing teeth. It doesn't actually offer much in the way of strategy or depth, so we're thankful you can try the game for free with 'FaceFighter Lite.' If the Lite version isn't enough for you, the full game is available for only $0.99 (for a limited time), and lets you battle friends head-to-head, so you can beat on each other's virtual mugs.

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Video Games, iPhone

Facebook Hit 'Bejeweled Blitz' Goes Mobile With iPhone App

Fans of the Facebook game 'Bejeweled Blitz' will be able to hone their gem-matching skills on the move when the free 'Bejeweled 2' iPhone add-on hits the App Store next week.

As with previous 'Bejeweled' games, the goal is to swap gems vertically and horizontally to match three or more. (A satisfying cacophony of explosions concludes the round if you've done your job.) But this streamlined edition gives you only one minute to do it, a boon for mobile users with some time, though not too much time, to kill. Best of all, 'Blitz' syncs automatically to Facebook, uploading high scores to a leaderboard in real time.

If users really feel the need to brag, they can post their scores to their Facebook profiles, reminding their family and friends who's the boss -- at least where puzzle games are concerned. [From: Games.com]

Cell Phones, iPhone

iPhone App, Where's My Car?

We love holiday shopping as much as the next person, but we could do without the mammoth parking lots (and our embarrassing inability to navigate them). Honestly, is there anything more demoralizing, after a successful raid on Walmart, than not being able to find your own car when you get outside? We think not.

Thankfully, there is hope for the parking-lot challenged, and it comes in the form of 'Car Finder' [App Store link]. Using augmented reality (real-time video overlaid with computer-generated graphics), this marvel is available from Apple's App Store for $0.99. It sounds cool, and it is. Simply use the app to mark your car's location, and walk away. On your way back, Car Finder, in conjunction with the iPhone's built-in GPS, lets you view your surroundings in on the iPhone's screen. Simply rotate your body until the screen displays the general direction of your wayward automobile, and a big red arrow will guide you to the icon that represents your car's location. Neat, huh?

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Cell Phones, iPhone

Preview Your Plastic Surgery With iSurgeon

Thinking about a nip here, or a tuck there? If you're not certain that a face lift or lipo is right for you, you might want to test the waters with an iPhone application. According to Reuters, two plastic surgery apps, both aiming to inform surgical candidates about different procedures, have been released in the past month.

The first, the Shafer Plastic Surgery App, was launched in October. It hosts a database of more than 1,000 questions and answers that people interested in surgery might ask. If you choose to pay $2.99 for the full version, you can also send the creator, Dr. David Shafer, direct questions about procedures. The second, iSurgeon, is a little creepier. This app, free to download this month, alters photos according to the plastic surgery procedure you select. For example, if you'd like to know what that breast enhancement would look like, simply snap a pic of yourself, select that procedure on the app, and bam. The digital version appears right before your eyes. Creepily easy, sure, but if just one less person ends up looking like Michael Jackson, these apps are successes in our minds. [From: Reuters, via DVICE]

Celebrities, iPhone

David Hasselhoff iPhone App Gives Bad Advice

For the promotion of his new British-only TV show 'Meet the Hasselhoffs' (Maybe VH1 is all reality-showed out.), ex-'Baywatch' and -'Knight Rider' hunk (or, maybe 'Baywatch' and 'Knight Rider' ex-hunk) David Hasselhoff has put out his own iPhone app. "Ask the Hoff" is a bit like a Magic Eight-ball, but instead of mystically revealed, one-word answers in blue goo, Hoff's mug stares back at you to give snide answers. Typically, they're of the 'Yes' or 'No' variety, although we did get these gems: "If I told you, I'd have to kill you," and "That is a disgusting question. What are you, a pervert?" Not very helpful advice, say, for aspiring lifeguards.

The Big D has always been known for his feeble stabs at legitimacy -- so much so that he's now a parody of himself. Still, we can't help but root for him. The Switched Team pooled together the $0.99 fee and downloaded "Ask The Hoff" to see if his sunburned brain could answer a couple of questions. We queried: "Did you get the alcohol?" He responded: "Of course, the answer was yes." We didn't really have doubts, Hoff-man. [From: Textually]

iPhone, Web, Social Networking

Pepsi Apologizes (Kinda) for Sexist iPhone App


Pepsi's latest ad campaign for its latest energy drink has certainly succeeded in getting a lot of people "amped" up -- and crying sexism.

As part of the soda company's efforts to promote its energy drink Amp, Pepsi released an iPhone app titled 'Amp Up Before You Score,' a how-to manual for helping men hook up with women. The app allows the user to choose one (or more!) of the 24 "types" of woman he would like to pursue on a given night. The "women" are displayed as curvaceous, cartoonish renditions of each branch of Pepsi's female phylum, running the gamut from "artist" to "military girl" to "sorority girl." After Casanova chooses the appropriate type, he's provided with a list of lines to drop in his pursuit, along with a SparkNotes-like primer of various subjects that a specific girl would likely talk about. If the guy's in a "punk" mood, the app leads him to a Wikipedia entry on punk rock. If he's feeling more Janis Joplin and less Joan Jett, he's provided with his own "tree-hugger" toolbox, replete with tips on "how to be a hippie." And, as the proverbial cherry on this sexist sundae, the Amp app even sports a special "brag list" feature, which allows the user to keep track of his, um, score, note the name and date of every conquest, and jot down "whatever details [he] can remember." (That sound you just heard was chivalry flat-lining.)

Pepsi, of course, issued an apology via the AMP Twitter feed: "Our app tried 2 show the humorous lengths guys go 2 pick up women. We apologize if it's in bad taste & appreciate your feedback." The company hasn't gone so far as to pull the app, despite any negative feedback from consumers, and we sorta understand the reasoning. The Huffington Post reports that the apology merely fueled the fire, with one Twitter user saying, "@cobra_DeEtta @AMPwhatsnext Your campaign is thoughtless and offensive despite the guise of juvenile humor to excuse it. Lame apology not accepted." Check out #pepsifail for more.

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iPhone

'Kondom Localizr' App Brings 'Rubber' Atlas to the iPhone


Apple has developed a reputation for taking a staid, old-fashioned approach to its iTunes store, but an app for Swiss iPhone owners could actually inspire people to engage in more carnal activities. According to Textually, the $3.99 'Kondom Localizr' app automatically alerts the user to the nearest of 3,000 condom dispensers throughout Switzerland. Since the safe-sex app is intended to raise AIDS awareness, it's nice to see that Apple can actually differentiate between shilling porn and promoting sexual health -- in Switzerland, at least. [From: Textually]

Car Tech, Cell Phones, iPhone

Pay Off Your Mercedes-Benz? There's an App for That

Pay Off Your Mercedes-Benz From Your iPhoneEveryone has an iPhone app nowadays. The Hut, Starbucks, our friends of TUAW, even car sharing service Zipcar are now part of the club. So who was left sitting around without a cheaply and poorly developed, multi-touch doodad, that they could slap their brand on? Apparently Mercedes-Benz, and as expected, the luxury car maker couldn't wait any longer to hop on the bandwagon. This isn't the first car company to release an iPhone app, but it is the first to even attempt to do something useful with one. Last October, Ford released its Flex app, which lets you manipulate snapshots taken with your iPhone, but seems to have very little to do with the Flex Fuel vehicles it was supposed to be promoting.

So what exactly can you do with the new Mercedes-Benz app? Well you can pay your bill, see when your bill is do due (Ed. note. Thanks, Chris), and see how much you've spent so far in your quest to own a shiny transport box that will inevitably be worth about one-tenth of the purchase price by the time you finish paying it off. Mercedes-Benz also included some basic concierge type features that can direct you to a local Mercedes dealer (in case you need a second E-Class Coupe), help you shop for auto insurance, get you room upgrades at hotels, and lastly, connect you with a customer service rep.

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Cell Phones, iPhone

CNN iPhone App Officially Hits iTunes


The highly anticipated CNN iPhone app has officially hit the App Store. The $1.99 app provides all of the expected benefits of CNN, on the go, including the day's top headlines, segmented into easily navigable categories, as well as high-quality videos of breaking stories. The app also provides a host of interactive and personalized features.

The My CNN function automatically locates your device, lets you choose what kind of stories to track, and almost immediately brings up the most significant news from your area, including region-specific weather, traffic, and local news updates. All stories can be easily saved and distributed to social networking friends using the easy-to-locate Share tab.

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Cell Phones, iPhone, Web, Social Networking

'Date Check' App Lets You Perform Background Checks on the Go

New iPhone App Lets You Perform Background Checks on the GoThe Internet has put an unsettling amount information at our fingertips. Now that the Web is finally usable on our phones, thanks to devices like the iPhone and Palm Pre, we can draw on this vast well of information (that many people would likely prefer remain private) anywhere we are.

One particularly creepy application appears thanks to Intelius, a company that provides a "people search" engine. The soon to be released 'Date Check' is a free app that lets you perform basic background checks on potential mates. While the app itself is free, the checks are not. After entering a person's name or cell phone number, 'Date Check' performs one of several types of searches, like 'Sleaze Detector,' which searches for a criminal background, 'Net Worth' provides details about a person's assets including property, and 'Interests' scours social networking sites for personal details.

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iPod, iPhone, Web

Offensive 'Lucky Fortune' App on iTunes Store

A recent addition to the iPhone app store has managed to enrage the Asian (and non-Asian) blogosphere alike. The 'Lucky Fortune' app displays a fortune cookie that the user, by shaking the iPhone, can "break" open to read their luck. So far, so good, right? Well, once the cookie cracks (to the sound of a gong), a voice reads out your fortune in what New York Times writer Jennifer 8. Lee describes on her blog as a "faux Chinese-y accent." She elaborates, "It definitely doesn't sound like a native Chinese speaker, just what someone who thinks a native Chinese speaker would sound like in English." The musical score of this spectacle of Sino-stereotyping is, not surprisingly, a sampling of generic stringed music, which we can only assume must be really, um, "Chinese."

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Cell Phones, iPhone, Mobile Software, Mobile Phones

New iPhone App Spreads News of Disease Outbreaks




For a culture that feeds ground-up, dead cows to living cows in the name of economics, we sure do get paranoid when it comes to disease. And there's no better sign of that paranoia than the Outbreaks Near Me iPhone app, which allows users to access disease outbreak information.

The app is based on the free HealthMap Web site, but improves upon it by letting users add to the knowledge base. When there's public-health trouble in the area, users can share the information with the rest of the community.

"Say you're in a clinical setting as a patient or clinician and seeing lots of unusual cases of something," Clark Freifeld, a founder of HealthMap and Ph.D. student in MIT Media Lab's New Media Medicine Group, told Wired.com. "You'd be able to note that down and submit it into the system." Mere hours after the app's release, HealthMap had already been informed of an illness at a school.

The service won't rely solely on man-on-the-street input, however; it takes information from various accredited news sources, as well. The idea, though, is that user submissions will start to relay preliminary warnings before official services are able to react. "It's about empowering citizens in the cause of public health to both provide them with information and allow them to contribute information to share with others," Freifeld explained to Wired.

Now, back to your regularly scheduled meal of chicken raised on chicken, cow raised on cow, etc. [From: Wired]

Cell Phones, Visionaries

Public Radio and the Problem With iPhone Apps

It's heartening to see the success of Public Radio Player 2.0, the official public radio iPhone app; it's reached nearly two million downloads. Produced in conjunction with the country's various public radio networks, the app offers up hundreds of stations and podcasts, and lets users search the massive collection for live and on-demand streams.

There is, however, one major hurdle: Apple's total kibosh on charitable giving via its App Store. You see, there is essentially no such thing -- Apple takes its 30-percent whether you're selling business software or asking for donations to malnourished children in Africa. The App Store represents a huge opportunity for giving to causes and, ultimately, the betterment of mankind... and yet Apple's stubbornness seems to be getting in the way.

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iPhone, Visionaries

19-Year-Old Singlehandedly Changing Online News


When then 17-year old Michael van Poppel somehow got his hands on an Osama bin Laden videotape two years ago and sold it to Reuters before anyone else had even heard of it, the landscape of media changed, so claims ReadWriteWeb. Van Poppel owns the Netherlands-based news aggregator, Breaking News Online, which operates under a simple, anti-large scale news source premise: smaller, people-run agencies can find, edit, and distribute world events faster than large media outlets. Since the sale, BNO has become the go-to news source for, well, go-to news sources, usually beating mass competitors by ten or fifteen minutes.

The young van Poppel is intrinsically tech savvy. He has taken to live-blogging, a perfect forum to break news as it occurs. BNO has over 800,000 Twitter followers (four times as many as ABC and twice as many as Newsweek). He's one-upping major mainstream outlets as well, with RSS feeds and daily e-mails, and he's now producing an iPhone application.

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Cell Phones, iPhone

PurityRing iPhone App Lets You Advertise Your Abstinence

PurityRing iPhone App, Lets Tech Savvy Advertise AbsinenceSo here's the dilemma: You're a devout Christian who wants to show off your dedication to abstinence, but you really detest physical objects. You prefer all your knickknacks to come in a virtual form on your iPhone screen. You've got a Virtual Zippo, an iPhone leveler, you even prefer to poking at virtual zits over the real thing.

So what are you, the pious-but-tech-savvy, to do? One option is PurityRing, an iPhone app that displays a spinning silver ring to indicate that you plan to refrain from obtaining carnal knowledge until you're married. The app costs $0.99, which might seem like a lot for an app that has little practical function, but is less than the cost of an actual ring. Of course, the developers don't intend this to be a replacement for actual Purity Pledge ceremonies at churches (or Purity Rings, for that matter). Instead, the app is meant to be a compliment to them.

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