Posts Tagged ‘powerful’

FirstWords: Animals (1.4)

December 28th, 2009 | No Comments »

FirstWords: Animals (1.4)
Learning
Category:
Price: $1.99
: HackingApple

Application :
More than just a game, First Words Animals is a powerful educational tool for the toddlers and tots in your life. It provides hours of fun, laughter and learning.


If your child is old enough to ask for your phone, they’re old enough for First Words Animals!


First Words Animals will help your child:


== develop fine motor skills

== learn to recognize and match letters

== learn the names of letters

== learn how to spell words


Of course, they won’t just be learning, they’ll also be laughing and having fun with 39 of their favorite animal friends, beautifully illustrated and matched with entertaining animal sounds.


First Words Animals is toddler-tested and approved, with a user-interface designed specifically for the littlest of fingers. More than just a game, it is a sophisticated learning tool that engages your child, encourages exploration, and helps them begin building a deep understanding of the relationships between letter and words.


A variety of options let you adjust the difficulty level to match the abilities of your younger or older kids.


Kids can play First Words by themselves, but they also enjoy bringing their grownups along, talking about the animals, saying the names of the letters, and watching the animals spin around and sound off.


If your child is old enough to ask for your phone, they’re old enough for First Words Animals!


== If you like First Words Animals, make sure to check out the other for kids from Learning .


== We love getting feedback and hearing stories about the kids who use our software! Share your stories in a review on or by leaving feedback at learningtouch.com. Let us know how your kids use FirstWords, and what you’d like to see us do next.

New in this Version:
Three new animals!

- Mule

- Puppy

- Wolf


Two new backgrounds!

- Farm

- Woods


Link to FirstWords: Deluxe in the “Get More Words” page.

Full info on Appulous

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Dead Strike (1.0)

December 27th, 2009 | No Comments »

Dead Strike (1.0)
Psychoz Interactive
Category:
Price: $1.99
: lemmythekoopa

Application :
Next (1.5): New controls, camera and gameplay mechanics! For more info:

http://www.psychozinteractive.com/index.php?p=1_2_Games


Fight your way through a sprawling 3D, zombie-infested city as four survivors attempt to stop an outbreak of the living dead.


The creation of an antidote depends on the group delivering a sample of the deadly virus to a hospital on the other side of the city. But as the foursome’s grim fight for survival continues, it becomes apparent that there’s more to the virus than anyone realized. As the group is systematically hunted by the ravenous living dead, they soon discover that these cannibalistic monsters aren’t as mindless as they look.


Dead Strike is the action-packed horror survival game the has been waiting for, with a powerful, twisted storyline, a brutal arsenal of weaponry, stunning graphics and more zombies than a BBQ at George Romero’s graveside.


With a four co-operative and survival multiplayer coming soon in a free , fans of Left 4 Dead, Killing Floor, Resident Evil and Silent Hill will devour Dead Strike, brains first!


TRAILERS:

http://tinyurl.com/deadstrike1


FEATURES:
• 46 levels, packed to bursting with legions of the undead.
• Unique abilities for each of the four characters.
• Nine different weapons including flamethrower, mini-gun and chainsaw.
• Original soundtrack with music and lyrics by Adrien Volpi and Francois Gratecap.
• Dynamic lighting, lens flare, mist and dust effects on all and iPod devices.
• Featuring true virtual analog stick (slide instead of ).
• Day and night battles.
• Choose a guns blazing action-packed approach or use stealth tactics to stay alive.
• Incredible AI allowing the undead to react to sounds and action, while communicating with each other in real .
• Frantic boss battles.
• Expansive and detailed 3D world to explore.
• Rich, gripping storyline, edited and co-written by Pure Square Go.
• Buckets of blood, special effects with sprays and splashes for full-on horror effect.
• High scores.


WEBPAGE:

http://psychozinteractive.com


:

http://www..com/DeadStrike

Full info on Appulous

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Can Google’s Chrome Banner Change the Course of the Browser Wars? [Browser Wars]

December 27th, 2009 | No Comments »

Google has an ad banner in their search home page, something that—as far as I can remember—has never happened before. It’s for their Chrome browser, and that means things are going to get nasty soon.

Google’s search home page has stayed clean forever, with no clutter or advertising banners of any kind. So why did the Mountain View company break their self-imposed design rule? The obvious answer: They are using their most powerful nuke—the most popular home page in the world—to try to change the course of the Browser War. Who knows, maybe this is the first step towards victory.

Google knows they need to control the web in every sense, and Chrome is now one of the most important pieces in their strategy to keep their web stronghold. It’s clearly the cornerstone of their future plans to take over the incoming new computing world—a world of smart phones and new devices that will eventually replace the computer as we know it. They are hoping the majority of those smart phones would be running Android, and tablets and computers would running ChromeOS. And rendering their web world, there will be Chrome. Not Internet Explorer, Safari/Webkit, or Firefox. Google wants to own the delivery medium, power the hardware, deploy the browser, and then control the delivery of the content. They want the whole enchilada.

That’s why this is happening. Chrome will now get exposed to the hundreds of millions of people who visit Google’s home page every day. Many will look at the banner and, trusting the Google brand, they will download and install it. My feeling is that many will click that big thing on the top right corner, but even if it’s a small percentage of visitors, the potential for change is enormous. We will see soon how effective this campaign could be, but there’s one fact that can’t be denied now: This is a competitive advantage that browsers like Firefox or Opera don’t have. If it ends being powerful change force, Google could eventually face an anti-trust investigation like the one Microsoft faced when they used their domination of desktop operating systems to win the Browser War 1.0 against Netscape. After all, the web is the new OS and Google owns the web.

Would Mozilla whine about this now, like they did about Microsoft? Would the Department of Justice keep an eye on this? Would the European Commission order Google to place banner’s for Firefox, Opera, Safari, and, o the irony, Explorer in Google’s home page, alongside Chrome’s?

It’s too early to tell if this is part of a long term aggressive push, but I can’t wait for this clusterfuck to happen. It’s going to be fun.




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How a Crook Conned The Bush Administration, the CIA, and the Pentagon [Crook]

December 26th, 2009 | No Comments »

Playboy has a fascinating article on Dennis Montgomery, the man who conned the CIA, the Department of Homeland Security, the Navy, the Air Force, the Senate Intelligence Committee and even Dick Cheney’s office into his phony anti-terrorist decryption technology.

Montgomery—then co-owner and Chief Technology Officer of Vegas-based “eTreppid Technologies” and a notorious gambler with $12 million in debt—staged false demonstrations on his laptop, using his “top secret software” to convince the previous administration about an absolutely stupid idea: Arabic TV station Al Jazeera was transmitting encrypted instructions which included “target coordinates” and flight numbers to sleeping Al Qaeda operatives around the world, using clues in their programming.

How serious was the government about this? On December 21, 2003, Montgomery fake information fired up all alerts, getting the country into a mass panic attack after Department of Homeland Security’s secretary Tom Ridge announced a risk of an attack “that could either rival or exceed what we experienced on September 11″ based on “credible sources.” The credible sources was Montgomery. Nothing ever happened then, but that was the beginning of the scam. Later, Montgomery declared that the Department of Defense paid his company “$30 million in contracts and and appropriated another $100 million in their black budget.”

After reading the article, I still can’t understand how the hell a crook like this was able to con an entire administration, the largest intelligence agency in the world—who at the end discredited Montgomery’s fake montage—and the most powerful military force, with such a preposterous idea. Was he really that smart? Maybe the key was his relation with Nevada Then-Congressman Jim Gibbons—later accused of using his influence to get this contracts to eTreppid? Was it the incompetence of the people in charge at the ? Was it their desperation to find any threads that could be used on their own benefit?

I’m leaning to a combination of all this possibilities. Go read the reportage. It is great Christmas weekend reading. As a bonus, you would be able to claim that you actually ogled over Playboy for a real article. [Playboy—Some images in this page are NSFW]




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BuildCalc – Advanced Construction Calculator (1.2.2)

December 25th, 2009 | No Comments »

BuildCalc – Advanced Construction Calculator (1.2.2)
42nd Parallel
Category: Utilities
Price: $19.99
: monkeyballz

Application :
POWERFUL AND CONVENIENT


BuildCalcPro brings the best, advanced construction-math calculator from your desk to your or iPod .


With the same built-in solutions you come to expect it is now more convenient than ever to complete plans, layouts, bids and estimates.


Save , reduce clutter and free yourself to focus on your priorities by consolidating two of the best tools you already know.



NOW WITH BUILT-IN HELP AND IMPROVED INTERFACE


Whether you have 30 years experience or new to this tool, BuildCalcPro’s built-in help demystifies advanced calculations with clear explanations, illustrations and examples. Just press and hold the button for which you are seeking help. In about 3 seconds, the help screen will appear along with links to the help screens for related functions.



FEATURES:


* Imperial and Metric dimensions, including fractional inches.

* Pitch, Rise, Run and Diagonal Right-Angle calculations

* Rectilinear, Cylindrical and Conic Areas, and Volumes

* Square-ups

* Detailed Layouts for:

__ Stairs

__ Roofs & Rafters

__ Rake-Walls

* Circles: Arcs, Circumference, Segments, Arched Rake-Walls

* Drywall, Siding, Shingles, Brick, Block, Tile and Panels

* Compound Miter Cuts



BuildCalcPro is the ideal construction-math calculator for Architects, Builders, Carpenters, Contractors, Designers, Drafters, Engineers, Estimators, Framers, and Tradesmen.

New in this Version:
NEW FEATURES
• Tape can be erased
• [dmsdeg] key will interpret any output from the [Pitch] key as an angle and convert it.


ISSUES ADDRESSED
• Tape properly stores results of calculations involving multiple presses of the [ = ] button.
• Preceding the following functions with the [Recall] button will now, in all cases, recall the value stored in that function.
• Output from the [wt/vol] key will now be in the units of the weight displayed.
• [ClrAll] will now reset the following to the factory default values: [SprAng], [FtArea], [o.c.], [RiserH], [TreadW], [FloorH], [wt/vol], and [BlkSz].
• The [DryWal] and [Blocks] keys now give priority to the current operand over the values stored in [Length] and [Height].
• [Recall] [Conv] [Blocks] will now show the stored block sizes.
• A bug where [Studs] incorrectly calculates one more stud than it should (effects 1 out of 1,048,576 calculations) has been fixed.
• A bug where the cost function results are sometimes one cent less than it should be has been fixed.

Full info on Appulous

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BABEL Rising (1.0)

December 24th, 2009 | No Comments »

BABEL Rising (1.0)
Bulkypix
Category:
Price: $0.99
: chefjetlee

Application :
Achetez maintenant Babel Rising à son prix de lancement, et bénéficiez de nouveaux éléments dès les premières mises à jour !

“You are God! From high above in the sky, it appears the humans are bustling about… and building a tower. A tower, what for? To raise themselves to your level? How conceited, how foolhardy. It is to show them the price to pay for defying the Creator!


Babel Rising is an action puzzle game offering hours of gameplay. The challenge is simple: unleash your powers to prevent the humans from building the tower.”
“You have six devastating powers at your disposal, including the thunderbolt, the typhoon and earthquake!

From the simplest to the most powerful, master them, use them one after the other and combine them to increase their impact.

Divine power is at your fingertips: sweep the screen from top to bottom and left to right with one finger or more to unleash your wrath.”

“Perform the “divine combo” successfully and sweep away the humans from the tower’s levels in one go.

Hilarious animations, detailed graphics and a soundtrack worthy of the best Roman Empire movies in a humorous setting.

Win trophies, publish your scores on-line and beat your best scores.”


Search for God and you will find him! You are the boss and mankind will be sure to remember!

Full info on Appulous

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The Simple yet Powerful To-do App for Mac

December 24th, 2009 | No Comments »

Spark is an astoundingly light-weight to-do app, incorporating an ‘’ style interface to fit in with your other .

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The Best Alternatives to Every Apple Product [Apple]

December 23rd, 2009 | No Comments »

makes some of the most specialized mainstream devices around, but the gear is never very cheap and, let’s face it, it stinks for any one company to own your wallet. So here are the best alternatives for each iProduct:

(If you’d like to see this post in non-gallery form, just click here.)

($199) -> Motorola Droid ($199)
When the was released, it was a generation, at least, beyond the entire smartphone market. Now, many manufacturers have worked hard to catch up. And while the is still my personal favorite, I understand wanting a phone on the Verizon network rather than AT&T. Besides, the Droid hardware is fantastic, and its software, Android 2.0, feels far more like a full-featured OS than the original. Just as we said in our full review, “It’s this simple: If you don’t buy an , buy a Droid.”

What you gain:
• Physical keyboard
• Fewer dropped calls
• Memory slot expansion

What you lose:
integration
• Decent built-in media

iPod Touch ($199, 8GB) -> Zune HD ($219, 16GB)
I know, I know. Why buy a Zune? If you’re heavily invested in albums, the answer is, no reason. But for those who are willing to break from the music infrastructure, the Zune HD is actually an awesome PMP. The aluminum case is very sharp, with an OLED screen that’s richer than any iPod (though slightly worse in the sun). The Zune software, coupled with optional unlimited download subscription packages, is every bit as hip and convenient as Cover Flow and , provided you run Windows. Oh, also, you don’t need to drop $300 to get a decent amount of storage and you get HD TV-Out and a not-so-bad TV interface to boot. So when you’re sick of the little screen, you can go as big as you’d like.

What you gain:
• 8GB more storage (base model)
• HD Radio
• Unlimited music subscription with free MP3s
• HD TV-Out and an on-screen TV interface

What you lose:
integration
• About a billion

iPod Nano ($180, 16GB) -> Flip Ultra HD ($150)
The obvious contender to the iPod Nano used to be the Zune 16. But now? You can’t even get that model of Zune. And with a built-in camcorder, be it a bit on the crappy side, the Nano truly is a unique contender in its space. However, I ask you this: Don’t you already have an MP3 ? Seriously, it’s not possible that you don’t. OK then, just buy the Flip Ultra HD, the best bang for your buck pocket camcorder on the market. And use your old iPod because it probably still works fine.

What you gain:
• HD video

What you lose:
• I mean, it’s not an iPod, or any kind of media , obviously

iPod Shuffle ($80, 4GB) -> Sansa Clip+ ($70, 8GB)
The new Shuffle is basically nonexistent, a device that, while remarkable in terms of minimalist design, may be a tad difficult to wield when you just want to play that one song you want to hear. Enter the Sansa Clip+, an chunky but still tiny MP3 lauded by audiophiles (if such a thing is possible) that supports up to 16GB of MicroSD expansion. Save even more money by buying the 2GB version (just $40) and sticking in a spare MicroSD. And as we said in our review, the Clip+ is “the best low-end mp3 on the market, without question.”

What you gain:
• Sound quality
• MicroSD expansion
• An actual screen
• Voice recorder
• The freedom to choose any headphones

What you lose:

Trash-talking Voice Over function

TV ($229, 160GB) -> Asus O!Play ($99)
No matter what direction you go, you’re pretty much always better off not buying an TV. It’s basically a closed box that hates supporting not only external codecs but external drives, too, and you can forget about navigating to files on your own network—even ones stored on your precious Time Capsule. The $99 Asus O!Play is our favorite budget way to play media in any codec under the sun, from files on a Mac or PC formatted drive or streamed from pretty much any NAS drive. As for watching movies on demand, chances are, your cable box already does that. Need more options? The LG BD390 is an excellent Wi-Fi-equipped Blu-ray with Netflix and Vudu video, and DivX . And heck, I’d even recommend the $199 Xbox 360 as a Netflix/DivX machine with Windows Media Center Extender capabilities. Basically, you can’t go wrong here. Everything is better than TV, unless you have a library full of purchased music and movies, and if you do, you probably have TV already, so go enjoy it.

What you gain:
• Mega codec
• Ability to stream your video files from computers and NAS drives
• Cash in your pocket

What you lose:
• The video ball and chain

MacBook ($999) -> Dell Studio 14z ($750)
As Mark Spoonauer said in our best Windows laptop roundup, “Think of it as the poor man’s MacBook-with better specs.” No, the Dell Studio 14z doesn’t run OS X, but the Core 2 Duo laptop weighs .3lbs lighter than a MacBook while offering 1GB more RAM (base), 70GB more storage, a backlit keyboard and nicer built-in speakers.

What you gain:
• More storage
• More RAM
• Backlit keyboard
• Less weight

What you lose:
• OS X
• Optical drive
• Flash card reader

MacBook Pro ($1200) -> HP Envy ($1700)
I’m not sure anyone should actually choose the 13-inch Envy (full review) over the 13-inch MacBook Pro (full review), but the Envy is the closest knock-off on the market. For the $500 Envy premium, you do shed .8lbs off the MacBook Pro, coming in at just 3.7lbs (which is crazy-light for a laptop of this size). And you’ll score an extra GB of RAM along with a more powerful, discrete Radeon HD 4330 graphics. But we’re still talking about $500 extra for a computer that, ultimately, doesn’t feel as solid as a unibody Mac. Plus, if you really want to run Win 7, that plays just fine on the MBP, too. As for the MBP 15, there’s really no ideal alternative. And if you were considering the 15-inch Envy, think again.

What you gain:
• More overall power
• Less weight
• Prettier screen

What you lose:
• OS X
• Optical drive
• Frame rigidity

iMac ($1200, 21.5-inch) -> HP TouchSmart 600 ($1,050, 23-inch)
The latest iMac (full review) is a beautiful machine, no doubt. But there are alternatives to this famed all-in-one. Our favorite is the HP TouchSmart 600 (full review), which is sort of the souped-up Civic to ’s classic Porsche. Both will do a quarter mile in the same —with Core 2 Duo processors—but the TouchSmart has the shiny detailing and LED underlighting of a street racer, while sprucing up the package with a decent display coupled with special , Facebook and even recipe box designed for the system. Especially as a kitchen computer, the HP TouchSmart is a valid alternative to the iMac.

What you gain:
• Larger, touchscreen
• Glitzy accents with customizable LED underlighting
• Clever
• HDMI input for home theater fun

What you lose:
• OS X
• Understated design

MacBook Air ($1500) -> Dell Adamo XPS ($2000)
There’s only one laptop on the market that can confidently purge alongside the MacBook Air, and that’s the Dell Adamo XPS. While the price premium seems absurd at first, keep in mind that the Adamo XPS, at about half the thickness of the Air, is loaded with a 128GB flash drive and 4GB of RAM stock (while the MacBook Air will run $1800 in a similar SSD configuration and maxed at 2GB of RAM). If you’re considering an Air, you want a computer that says “I’m good at spending money.” And the Adamo XPS will most certainly fulfill that need.

What you gain:
• 1 USB port
• Ethernet jack
• 2GB of RAM
• A clasp that opens from the heat of your finger

What you lose:
• OS X
• About $500

Mac Mini ($600) -> Acer AspireRevo R6310 ($330)
If I had the choice between a Mac Mini (full review) and the AspireRevo R6310—spending someone else’s money—I would still choose the Revo for its HTPC prowess. The Mac Mini has always been a promising system falling just short of its potential in terms of both price and performance. Meanwhile, the absurdly cheap Revo, equipped with Ion tech that’s more than happy to handle 1080p video outputted to your TV through HDMI (as opposed to ’s need for funky wiring and/or hard-to-find specialized adapters), is kind enough to include 2GB RAM, 160GB HDD, HDMI, eSATA, VGA, 6 USB ports, card reader, wireless-N and a wireless keyboard and mouse for roughly half the price of a Mini. The only thing the Revo isn’t optimal for is browsing Flash pages, that is, until we finally see an that makes Ions and Flash play well together.

What you gain:
• HDMI out
• 1 USB port
• eSATA port
• Wireless keyboard and mouse
• Like $300

What you lose:
• OS X
• FireWire

Capsule (1TB, $299) -> D-Link DIR-685 (Expandable, $215)
The convenience of a Capsule, a combination wireless router and NAS, is tough to beat because it’s so unique. But I wouldn’t call the task impossible. The D-Link DIR-685 (full review) is a wireless-N router with a range that’s competitive with ’s own AirPort Extreme. You choose your storage capacity by sticking in your own 2.5-inch drive. Oh, plus it’s a photo frame, BitTorrent downloader, server, FTP server, network file sharing with user management and even a UPnP streamer to video players. The only thing it isn’t? Machine compliant. I know, I know. If you’re willing to part with the built-in router, however, then another excellent choice is the Iomega Ix2-200 NAS (full review)—and that is Machine capable.

What you gain:
• Swappable storage
• Tons of advanced networking features
• BitTorrent downloading
• Media flexibility
• Digital photo frame

What you lose:
Machine (if this is a problem, check out Iomega’s alternative)

Mac Pro ($2,500) -> Hackintosh (far less $$$)
There is one reason you want to buy a Mac Pro, and that’s for OS X. So I’m not going to waste by pretending there’s any suitable alternative by someone like Dell or HP. Your best bet is to build a Hackintosh, a custom PC with a bootlegged OS X. Just keep in mind, you won’t be able to build this system like any old Windows PC—you’ll need to follow a guide with pretested hardware to construct something you can be sure will work. Luckily, such a guide is available, built by our friends from Lifehacker (see it here).

What you gain:
• Literally, thousands of dollars
• Gaudy case mods

What you lose:
• Peace of mind (there’s always the slight chance of Hackintosh deactivation)
• Easy component upgrades




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Panasonic Delivering a Lithium Storage Battery That Can Power Your Home For a Week [Batteries]

December 23rd, 2009 | No Comments »

After officially taking over Sanyo earlier this week, Panasonic is hitting the ground running with a joint venture aimed at developing a powerful lithium-ion storage battery than could store enough juice to power an average [Japanese] home for a week.

The battery will also include a system that will allow users to monitor their electricity usage through their televisions. Seems like a viable alternative to solar batteries and fuel cells, but I’m curious to know how a week of powering a Japanese home equates to powering a typical American home. Either way, the technology won’t be available until sometime in 2011. [Physorg]




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How To: Using Bento App And Syncing With Bento For Mac

December 23rd, 2009 | No Comments »

If you want find a simple solution on how to organize your life or small business, Bento will help you find the answer. Bento started out as a simple desktop program for the mac by the creators of FileMaker Pro., but now has an app that works and syncs beautifully with the desktop companion. Here are a few tips to get you synced with Bento for mac and to get started with the powerful app.

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