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Audio/Video, Cell Phones, iPhone, Switched Video, Mobile Software, Home Audio, Mobile Phones

Finger Piano Share: Play Real Pianos From Your iPhone, Remotely

The iPhone increasing lets you do many things, but playing a real piano in real time so far hasn't been one of them -- at least until this past week at CEATEC, the annual consumer electronics show held in Tokyo, Japan, which we were fortunate enough to attend. On display at the Yamaha booth was one of the more impressive iPhone apps we've seen to date: Called Finger Piano Share, since it lets up to 10 people remotely play a real piano from their iPhones via Wi-Fi (the piano must be of the MIDI-enabled Disklavier variety, of course).

You'll see a bit of what the app looks like in the above video. You tap a virtual key on your iPhone screen, and the real key plays on the piano. Finger Piano Share lets you play music of your own creation, improvise along with other folks simultaneously for some kind of abstract jam session, or play pre-programmed tunes by following onscreen prompts, a la 'Rock Band.'

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Car Tech, Green Tech, iPhone, Mobile Software

Nissan iPhone App Helps You Win the Grand Prix -- of Eco-Driving

nissan e1 grand prix ceatec

The iPhone may not be as big in Japan as it is in the States, but that hasn't stopped Nissan from developing an app that shows the residents of Yokohama City, Japan how to drive better.

The new program is part of a trial service called E1 Grand Prix. Here's how it works: The app connects to your car's On-Board Diagnostics (OBD), and extracts information in real-time to determine how efficiently you're driving (you know, from a saving fuel perspective). Step on the gas and then break too much, and you'll get a low score; accelerate just enough to coast to the corner before the light turns red, and you'll get high marks. The app connects to your OBD via in-car mobile Wi-Fi, and then spits back your results on your iPhone screen and via e-mail. The results are also uploaded to an online site, where you essentially compete with other folks to be the most 'eco-efficient' driver -- hence the 'Grand Prix' name).

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Cell Phones, Mobile Software, Mobile Phones

Nokia's New 'Vibe' Braille Helps the Blind Read Text Messages


As part of an ongoing effort to refine and improve mobile communication options for the blind, Nokia Labs has introduced a new SMS application (video after the break) that allows blind users to receive Braille text messages via the company's touch phones. The program receives the tactile texts, and, with a series of coded vibrations, relays the message to the user.

To date, most blind-accessible phones have featured devices that process text messages and then read them aloud to the user, rather than using vibrations. There are several more new developments in mobile software oriented towards the visually impaired, too. An iPhone app currently in development at iVisit is reported to be able to recognize everyday objects with the phone's camera, and identify them aurally for blind users. (The iPhone features several apps for the hearing impaired as well, including soundAMP and iHearClear.) CodeFactory, too, offers a variety of mobile downloads and applications for the visually impaired, including software that magnifies a phone's screen for better visibility.

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Cell Phones, Celebrities, iPhone, Mobile Software

Sing Like T-Pain With New Auto-Tune App For iPhone

You can't turn on the radio without hearing the impact Auto-Tune, a software program that corrects a singer's pitch. Whether that's good or bad is up for debate, but that hasn't stopped both schools of thought from cashing in on the craze. Jay-Z pumped out his anti-ballad 'Death to Auto-Tune,' and, on the other side, T-Pain now further cements his status as 'King of Auto-Tune' with a new iPhone application, as if there were any question after "On A Boat" (after the break, explicit language).

The 'I Am T-Pain App' helps anyone with Apple's mobile device (and $2.99 in their pocket) sing in that same robotic tone as the aforementioned musician, according to Digital Beat. Just hold the phone close to your mouth, belt out a few lines (they don't have to be from a T-Pain song, but the app does provide lyrics), and the program automatically corrects your pitch. It'll be just like you're in the studio with T-Pain, minus the bottle of cognac and bling.

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iPhone, Mobile Software, Web

TUAW Launches iPhone App


Our friends over at The Unofficial Apple Weblog just launched a new iPhone app (already #3 in the free news category on the App Store), available now via iTunes [iTunes link] and via the TUAW app page.

You mobile Mac-heads out there probably know about i.tuaw.com, the iPhone-optimized version of TUAW. Why go native? The new app offers offline browsing, allows you to bookmark articles for later reading, features Twitter/e-mail/Facebook-sharing capability, and lets you view that retro Mac design gallery in glorious full screen. Now, you don't have any excuse for missing out on that blurry pic of the latest Apple iDevice, taken in some dark factory by a TUAW secret agent.

And, yes, fellow Apple addicts, there's more. We've got a video tour of the app embedded after the break.

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Editor's Picks, Interviews, Celebrities, TV, iPhone, Switched Video, Mobile Software

Greg Grunberg's Secret HDTV Viewing Habits (and New iPhone App)

Like Heather Locklear of 'Dynasty,' 'TJ Hooker,' 'Melrose Place' and 'Spin City' fame, Greg Grunberg is one of those actors fortunate to have starred in three back-to-back hit series. His first big roles came in the J.J.-Abrams-produced 'Felicity' and 'Alias,' but now he is best known for the NBC show 'Heroes,' in which he plays Matt Parkman, a policeman who can hear what other people are thinking. When Grunberg isn't busy being a successful actor, he's clipping coupons, which is what led him to create Yowza!!, a new online e-coupon clipping app for the iPhone. Grunberg discusses his new app in the video below; but first, take a look at the Switched Questionnaire above, in which Grunberg dishes on his video game sessions with 'the J man' (J.J. Abrams) and his guilty HDTV pleasures (they don't include 'Heroes.').

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Cell Phones, Mobile Software

Cell Phones Boost Saucy Manga Comics Sales in Japan (Among Women)


The manga (Japanese comics) industry in Japan has been in steady decline for the past decade, but it seems an unlikely savior has finally arrived: the cell phone. The New York Times is reporting that direct-to-cell sales of manga have jumped up 43-percent from last year -- a significant jump in and of itself, but even more impressive given the cell phone manga market's typical slow yearly growth. Reasons given for the sudden surge in business include fast cellular networks, good prices with convenient payment processes (charges simply show up on one's monthly phone bill), and the fact that manga simply looks gorgeous on a high resolution back-lit screen.

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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, iPhone, Mobile Software

iPhone's 'Email 'n Walk' Lets You E-Mail and Walk at the Same Time

Emain 'n Walk Lets You... Email and Walk
We here at Switched are what you might call e-mail addicts. In fact, we have no idea how we survived before the invention of mobile e-mail and smart phones -- but even we have to admit that the Email 'n Walk iPhone app is a little ludicrous.

Free for a limited time, Email 'n Walk for the iPhone lets you safely (in theory) compose e-mails while walking by displaying a video feed taken live from the camera underneath your message. So, now you can see where you're walking while you type, without the distraction of looking up every few seconds.

Of course, this will only show you what's directly in front of the camera, so you'll still have to be careful of low hanging tree branches and telephone poles. [From: Apple iPhone Apps, Via: Textually.org]

Cell Phones, iPhone, Mobile Software

New iPhone App Aims to Help You Avoid Swine Flu

http://www.switched.com/2009/03/09/webcam-virus-hijacks-750-twitter-accounts/You know the deal -- there's an app for everything. Literally.

And now there is an app for tracking the over-hyped medical threat that the press has dubbed Swine Flu. Sure, Swine Flu has been less deadly than Bird Flu (which wasn't particularly deadly to begin with), and less fun to say than Monkey Pox, but that hasn't stopped the media from turning it into a story you can't avoid.

So, while you can't avoid the coverage, you can avoid the infected with the help of your iPhone and 'Swine Flu Tracker,' which is currently awaiting Apple's approval to be placed in the app store. This means that by the time 'Tracker' is actually available, it'll be useless since we'll all have moved on to something more fun, like Buffalo Fever or Jersey-Girl-itis.

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iPhone, Mobile Phones

Baby Shaking iPhone App: Fun, If You're a Psycopath


In the ever-expanding iPhone app store, there are some helpful, fun and downright awesome sources of information and entertainment. That said, every so often an app shows up that makes us wonder what the hell the people at Apple were thinking (if they were, in fact, thinking when they approved it).

We are speaking, of course, about the now infamous 'Baby Shaker' app that went on sale Monday, according to TechCrunch and the Telegraph. The app allows users to, you guessed it, shake a crying baby to death (you know the baby is dead because when she stops crying two red X's cover her eyes). Simply shake the phone as hard as you can, and the stupid baby shuts up.

The application, created by San Francisco-based company Sikilasoft, has already been pulled, but the fact that it ever gained approval leaves us dumbfounded. We are all for creative entertainment, and for pushing boundaries, but this is ridiculous. Get it together, Apple. [From: TechCrunch and The Telegraph]

[UPDATE: In a rare backpedal by Apple, the company has issued a public apology, stating that the "application was deeply offensive and should not have been approved for distribution on the App Store." Check out Cnet to read the full apology.]

Video Games, Editor's Picks, iPod, iPhone, Mobile Software, Reviews, Mobile Phones

Tapulous Releases New Coldplay 'Tap Tap' Game (Hands-On Review)



'Tap Tap Revenge,' an iPhone and iPod Touch game with a similar style of play to 'Dance Dance Revolution' and 'Guitar Hero,' has become the most installed app on the two Apple devices, attracting millions of downloads, according to comScore. This week, Tapulous, the makers of the commute-killing masterpiece, released its latest 'Tap Tap' iPhone app - 'Tap Tap Revenge Coldplay.' For this special-edition installment of the franchise, which includes 'Tap Tap Dance' and 'Revenge 2,' the designers paired up with the Grammy-winning band to produce an entrancing and hypnotic game fueled by 10 popular tracks.

While we are, admittedly, not avid fans of Coldplay, the game never loses its appeal. The enhanced graphics, mesmerizing array of colors, and flowing backdrops remain entertaining throughout all four difficulty levels, although we probably appeared to be violently abusing our defenseless iPod while attempting to play the "Extreme" setting. The multiplayer function, also available on some of the other titles, adds an extra dimension to gameplay. If you're sharing a gadget, just be careful not to get so animated that you headbutt your opponent (although that might have aided us in our over-matched contest against a piano player with far more dexterous fingers than our own).

If you enjoy killing time with 'Tap Tap,' but Coldplay's not your thing, the recent release 'Revenge 2' features over 150 free songs from a variety of genres including rock, hip-hop and country. [From: Tapulous]

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Video Games, iPod, iPhone, Mobile Software, Mobile Phones

'Miracle On Hudson' Now an iPhone/iPod Touch App



Most of us reacted with a mixture of relief and awe when we first heard about Captain Chesley Sullenberger III's deft landing of the bird-stricken US Airways Flight 1549 in the Hudson River on January 15, 2009. If you've ever wondered how you'd have fared in the pilot's seat that day, then check out the most recent iPhone/iPod touch app from Laminar Research, which, believe it or not, is the second game to tackle this event.

In 'Sully's Flight' ($0.99), you'll get a shot at the famous landing, flying the engine-less airliner by tilting your iPhone back and forth, no less. The game starts you on the runway at the LaGuardia airport, where you'll be able to take off, hit a flock of geese, lose power, and then try to land the hobbled Airbus 320 in the Hudson. The best (or most disturbing) part of the simulation is that 'Sully's Flight' uses the real air-traffic recording of the interaction between the on-board crew and ground control.

Is this game just another example of blatant situational exploitation? Absolutely. Are we going to get it? Probably. [From: TUAW]

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Cell Phones, iPhone, Mobile Software

First "Shakeable" Dockers Ad Debuts on iPhone


If you're anything like us, you love using any application on your iPhone that makes use of the phone's innovative accelerometer (we love Urbanspoon even when we're not hungry).

The people over at Dockers San Francisco obviously love it too because they have launched what they believe to be the first 'shakeable' ad. The ad stars Dufon, a dancer from the Seattle group "Circle of Fire," and will appear between levels in the iPhone games iBasketball, iGolf, and iBowl (it will also appear in iTV). Players that choose to shake their phone when the ad asks them to will witness Dufon dancing in his khakis to the rhythm of their wrists.

Dockers has tried to reach younger markets before and, while the theme of this ad screams Gap circa 1998, this is certainly a start. Anything but pleated khakis...please! [From: Adage.com]

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Cell Phones, iPhone, Mobile Software

Craigslist Goes Mobile With New iPhone App


Craigslist devotees can now take the popular Web site to the streets, as Next Mobile Web has recently released its Craigsphone app for the iPhone. The app lets you browse and post to Craigslist, but it also enables other nifty features such as "Stuff Nearby," which lets you view postings close to your phone's GPS location (currently San Francisco Bay area and Manhattan only).

Miss a connection at the coffee shop? Snap a quick picture of yourself and post it on "missed connections" right then and there. It's about time for this iPhone app, and we're already looking forward to an all new slew of manic mobile postings on the 'ol Craigslist "best of" list. [From: Textually.org]

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CNET provides the latest tech news, unbiased reviews, videos, podcasts, software, and downloads, making tech products easy to find, understand and use.

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