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Just Released: Animal Drummer for iPhone

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Hands up who loves the Muppets and I’ll count, starting with me.
Disney’s just released an “Animal Drummer”, a rhythm game for people who enjoy Animal’s unique (and somewhat insane) drumming style.

The basic game is a follow-along: Animal drums a riff, and you see if you can match it. There’s also a Free Play mode [...]

Psystar permanently banned from selling Mac clones

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We’ve all been gleefully following the seventeen month legal battle between Apple and Mac clone maker Psystar, but it looks likes the credits are finally about to roll. Yesterday, United States District Judge William Alsup granted a permanent injunction to Apple that will prevent Psystar from ever again selling hardware with Apple’s operating system already [...]

AT&T Threatens To Fire iPhone Users For Costing Company Too Much Money

Peggy and John Alexander calim AT&T is firing them as iPhone users because they are costing the company too much money in roaming charges. The AlexanderAT&T is threatening to terminate the accounts of a pair of iPhone users because they’re costing the company too much money.
“AT&T is firing us as iPhone users,” says Penny Alexander, who lives in Dadeville, Alabama, with her husband John.
In late November the Alexanders received a letter from AT&T saying that because they didn’t live in [...]

Review: iVideoCamera Doesn’t Do Great Video, But It’s A Start

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So Apple has allowed into the Store a third-party video recording application for plain old 2G and 3G iPhones; but honestly, don’t get your hopes up too high.
iVideoCamera by Laan Labs suffers some serious limitations: it only records three frames a second, it can only record for a minute at most, and resolution is just [...]

iPhone Car Pooling App

In about 10 days, Mapflow will launch a free iPhone app called Avego for car pooling. (The home page says they’re waiting for Apple Push capability).

The nice thing: though the Avego app exploits smartphone capabilities, you don’t have to have an iPhone to hitch a ride.

Here’s how it works, according to the website:

Avego drivers have dashboard-mounted, GPS-enabled iPhones running the Avego app. The driver selects destination from past route history, then empty seats are offered to potential riders. When a potential rider on the route wants a ride at a certain time, the best Avego car is selected and that driver is offered the pickup. If the driver accepts, then voice directions guide the driver to a safe place to pull over and take on riders. When the driver pulls over, a picture of the rider appears on the iPhone, so the driver can authenticate the rider. The driver drives to the destination. On the iPhone, the driver rates the rider experience from 1 to 5. In the cloud, Avego splits the costs of the shared ride in a fair and automated way.

Riders:

Mary, a commuter, gets ready for work. She has a common cell phone. At 7:30AM she texts a coded request for an immediate ride to work. Mary also has an Avego web interface where all her routes are visible, with the associated texting code. The Avego server texts back within a few seconds that a ride is available at 7:35AM at Mary’s closest Avego stop, a two-minute walk away. The text includes vehicle make, model and license plate. Mary walks out the door to the stop. A picture of the driver arrives on Mary’s handset for her to authenticate the driver. The driver pulls up with an Avego decal on the car. Once in the car, Mary texts Avego that the ride has commenced. The driver drives to the destination. Mary and the driver get out. Mary rates the driver experience from 1 to 5 via text message. In the account cloud, Avego splits the costs of the shared ride.

In a perfect world, there would be enough users that a 7:30 AM request gets you to the office in time.

Via Trendhunter

About the author

nicole_martinelli

Nicole Martinelli was born in San Francisco and has lived in Milan and Florence, Italy. Cultish tendencies and love for DIY increased while living on the Old Continent, where tech came late and cost more in Big Mac index terms. She's written for Wired.com, The New York Times and Newsweek, and since 1999 on her site, Zoomata. If you're so inclined, friend her on Facebook or connect on Linked in.

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