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Cell Phones, iPhone

Tongue-Based 'iLickit' App Lets You Lick to Win

Remember when your parents would say, "You aren't leaving this table until you clean that plate?" Of course, you do. It's why you, along with millions of other Americans, turned into such a glutton. So, if you need to work out some deep gastrointestinal and parental issues, well, there's an app for that (maybe). According to The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW), iLickit is the first iPhone application controlled by your tongue. It's a simple premise: just select a food and start licking the screen (video after the break). The game keeps track of the time it takes you to lick away all the food.

Yes, this is app is weird and probably unsanitary, but TUAW says iLickit will actually hit Apple's app store sometime soon. Although we couldn't find any other information indicating whether or not this is a joke, the demo video is pretty convincing. Pray it's a hoax. The last thing we want to see is some middle-aged guy's slobbery tongue plastered to his smartphone. [From: The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW), via Eat Me Daily]

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iPod, iPhone

Porn Stars Go Mobile in New iPhone Apps

The day of celebration has arrived for porn-loving iPhone owners. Sultry stars Sunny Leone and Aria Giovanni have officially made their Apple-approved iPhone app debuts, according to CNET. The apps, courtesy of GrindHouse Mobile, feature photos, blogs, and videos, but, in news certain to crush the hopes of adolescents everywhere, reportedly contain no actual nudity.

GrindHouse had to compromise its initial, too-"hot" vision so that the apps could meet Apple standards, but a GrindHouse spokesperson promised in a press release that the content would still be "compelling and user friendly." Updated premium versions, which are currently seeking approval, would provide more "interactive features," allowing fans to actually communicate with the stars. The porn-on-the-go creators are also in the process of developing an app that celebrates the adult talents of 'The Girls of Erotica.com.'

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Cell Phones, iPod, iPhone

Steve Jobs Returns With New Camcorder Nano, iTunes 9

Jobs is Back, Nanos Get Cameras, iTunes 9 and Other Apple Highlights
No doubt the biggest news at today's Apple event is the triumphant return of Steve Jobs. Out of the spotlight due to health issues, the perpetually black-turtleneck-clad Jobs took the stage (video), proudly proclaiming his gift of life. Brand new liver aside, it was the same Steve everyone has come to know and love, including the first "One more thing..." we've heard in quite some time. Head after the break for a rundown of all that's new in the Apple Universe today.

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Cell Phones, iPod, iPhone, Mobile Software, Downloads, Web

This Week in Tech: Apple Approved Spotify App, Confounding Critics


Many online services have tried to drag online one of the last hold-outs of desktop software: the music manager. But the hurdle upon which Last.FM, Imeem, Slacker, and Pandora all stumble is their inability to offer users access to whatever music they want, on-demand, especially in the mobile sphere. Most of the mobile versions of these apps have been relegated to streaming, predetermined playlists and "stations." As such, none of these apps have managed to knock the desktop-based iTunes off its throne.

Spotify, on the other hand, combines the social and, most importantly, free, aspects of these Web apps with the on-demand capabilities of services like Napster. A key element of Spotify's business plan revolves around an iPhone application that will let you stream any song you want over 3G (as long as it's one of the six million for which the company has secured licensing deals). One feature that will make Spotify stand heads above the competition is its ability to cache songs for offline play. That means that even if you venture into the subway or wander outside of your coverage area, Spotify will keep on playing.

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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]

iPhone

Chipotle Makes Lunch Lazier With iPhone App



We told you about the Dunkin' Donuts iPhone app. QSR told us about the Burger King app, and TechCrunch told us about the Pizza Hut app. Well, we've now gotten word from Gizmodo that Chipotle -- the Nick Nolte to Taco Bell's Gary Busey -- has an app of its own, as well.

With the app (which can, of course, be gotten at Apple's App Store), anybody with an iPhone or iPod touch can locate the closest Chipotle branch, order up their favorite fancy-pants burrito, save the order (in case they're a regular), and pay for it -- all from the comfort of their... well, wherever, really. Never let that three minute wait at the register come between you and your guacamole again. [From: Gizmodo]

Cell Phones, iPhone

'Brushes' iPhone App: Fingerpainting Without the Mess

Are you a clean-freak, on-the-move, not-entirely-struggling artist? If so, 'Brushes,' a new art application for the iPhone, could be for you. Eliminating the need for cumbersome (and messy) brushes, paint tubes, pencils, sketchbooks, and other supplies, the app allows aspiring iArtists to create miniature oeuvres with the tips of their fingers.

According to The Daily Mail, many digital artists are using 'Brushes,' which costs $4.99 at the App Store, to create detailed works of art while riding the subway to work or waiting in the lobby at the dentist's office. It's not just MS Paint in mobile form, either; one 'Brushes' devotee, Jorge Colombo, found his work on the cover of 'The New Yorker.'

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iPod, iPhone

Cartier Sues Apple Over Fake Watch iPhone Apps, Apple Backs Down

Cartier Has Apple Pull a Pair of AppsHigh-end jeweler Cartier garnered itself a bit of (perhaps unwanted) attention this past weekend when it filed a trademark infringement suit regarding a small time iPhone app developer -- Digitopolis Game Studio. The company created a pair of apps, called Fake Watch and Fake Watch Gold Edition, which featured recreations of Cartier's "Tank" watch.

Oddly enough, Cartier didn't sue Digitopolis, but rather, Apple, for allowing the applications into its marketplace. The jewelry maker withdrew its suit after Apple yanked the offending titles Friday afternoon, stating that Cartier's "concerns had been addressed."

Of course, Cartier might do better to spend its time battling guys selling cheap knockoffs on Canal Street, rather than suing Apple over poor renderings on an iPhone. Just a thought. [From: TUAW]

Cell Phones

Doctors and Med Students Embrace Smartphones

Even though smartphones have been around for years, the exploding application scene (started by Apple's App Store) has transformed what was typically a business communication device into much, much more. Despite the surge in mobile entertainment apps, it's not all games: According to the Washington Post, roughly 64-percent of doctors in the U.S. use a smartphone, and many are using devices like the iPhone to look up drug interactions, view X-rays, and even stream music during a surgery.

Med school students are also getting in on the action, with Georgetown's medical school requiring students to own either an iPhone or iPod Touch (sound familiar?). Similarly, Ohio State University has promised to give each and every one of its 1,400 students an iPod Touch by this Fall. Catherine Lucey, Vice Dean for Education at OSU told the Washington Post, "It allows the residents and the students to ask questions at the bedside, and not rely on memory and not guess. They can actually sit with the patient if they wish and use a number of online sources."

There's pretty much an infinite number of uses a device like the iPhone could offer the medical field. With over 25 pages of medical-related apps on the App Store alone -- and the ability to link specialized hardware to the yet-to-be-released iPhone 3.0 -- you have to wonder if Apple had this planned all along. [From: The Washington Post]

iPhone, Mobile Software

Rejected, Racy iPhone App Accepted After '12+' Rating Stamp


It's no secret that the iPhone App Store's approval process is ambiguous at best and fundamentally flawed at worst. From the iFarts of the world to questionable baby-shaking apps, no one really knows why an app gets accepted or rejected from the store. But, in the case of the once-rejected Peekababe, developer Alan Bigio suspects that slapping an adolescent-friendly, '12+' rating on the app may have been just what it needed for approval, reports TechCrunch.

What made the app's initial rejection puzzling is that there are many approved apps just like it. Peekababe shows various photos of sexy women and includes the option to "undress" them (check out the video above), right down to their skimpy lingerie. There's no nudity, and, really, even network television gets more risque. While the more age-inclusive rating stamp hasn't been officially confirmed as the reason the app was accepted, it was likely a factor. Bigio told TechCrunch, "My rating was based on the guidelines that they have for the iTunes store. Better to be safe than sorry." [From: TechCrunch]

Audio/Video, iPod, Portable Audio

Limited Edition, Prince-Themed iPod Touch -- Only $2,100


While certainly not the most expensive iPod we've ever seen, the limited edition Prince Opus iPod touch is definitely amongst the priciest. Sold only as part of an ultra rare kit that includes a luxurious book of Prince photographs from Kraken Opus, this touch (of unknown capacity) comes preloaded with 40 minutes of "exclusive" footage along with a live soundtrack from 'Indigo Nights.' Of course, it's also doused in purple and splashed with Prince's symbol 'round back, but even with only 950 kits available, we still say the $2,100 price tag is far too lofty. Hate to break it to ya, Opus, but those hedge funds are no longer partying like it's 1999.

[Via All Things Digital]

Cell Phones, BlackBerry, iPhone

Skype App Coming to iPhone on Tuesday, BlackBerry in May


It's legit; Skype is coming to the iPhone on Tuesday, BlackBerry devices in May. While we've seen plenty of Skype-capable apps on the iPhone, the poor, often echo-infected calls should be easily bested by the official Skype App that doesn't need the extra audio transcoding workaround required by the existing crop of unofficial apps. The Skype app works over Wi-Fi only (not over EDGE or 3G data) and supports calls to SkypeOut contacts in addition to many of the other features you've used from the desktop client. iPod touch owners will require earphones with an embedded mic to talk. CNET has a hands-on preview of the App just as long as you can muster the energy required to hit the read link below.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Audio/Video, iPod, iPhone

Sirius XM Developing iPhone / iPod touch Streaming Radio App


My, my -- now isn't this something? Shortly after narrowly avoiding a dastardly collision with bankruptcy, Sirius XM is looking to connect itself with profitable enterprises in an attempt to build market share and regain interest from budget-conscience consumers. Just weeks after hearing that the sat radio company could be preparing a few Sirius / DirecTV bundles, CFO David Frear has now confirmed on a recent earnings call that the outfit is indeed developing an iPhone / iPod touch app. It's interesting to think that a satellite radio firm could be warming to delivering more content via the internet, but it's the apparent diversion from being a standalone offering that has us even more intrigued. It should be interesting to see how the pricing model works with this forthcoming app -- will users be able to get an iPhone subscription only? Will it be tossed in gratis with traditional subscriptions? So many questions, not enough patience. [Image courtesy of SiriusBuzz]

Cell Phones, Video Games, iPod, iPhone

iTunes App Store Rife with Gross Games

iTunes App Store Ripe with Gross GamesiTunes App Store Ripe with Gross Games

If you measure the success of a gadget by its available number of juvenile, gross applications and accessories then the iPhone is a huge hit. We've already seen an iPhone-compatible vibrator, but that is nothing compared to the slew of repulsive, albeit less sexually explicit, games available at the App Store.

A girl we once dated really enjoyed popping people's black heads. A tad gross, we won't lie, and nobody actually wanted to let her do it, but we found ourselves e-mailing her today to let her know about 'Zit Picker,' a game for the iPhone and iPod touch that lets you pop virtual blemishes on a woman's face, complete with stomach churning, exaggerated sound effects.

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iPod

New iPod touch Application Improves Your Sniper Rifle Accuracy


We're trying... we're trying real hard to cling to our pacifist ways. But damn if the fusion of this US Army M110 Sniper Rifle and mounted iPod touch running the BulletFlight external ballistics calculator (available via the App Store) doesn't make us want to kill. Tap in the variables such as weather conditions, ammunition type, distance to target, and wind speed before exhaling and gently squeezing back on your second amendment right. God bless America.

[Via The Firearm Blog]

Read -- M110 sniper rifle with iPod touch mount
Read -- BulletFlight App [warning: iTunes link]

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