If you’re looking to send your baby snookums photo love notes this Valentine’s Day, Valentine Photo Free (iTunes link) is a simple app that makes adding hearts and other Valentine’s Day-themed graphics to your photos easy. And best of all, it’s free.
While not the smoothest interface we’ve seen in an app, it gets the job done. Simply drag the graphics into the photos. You can resize or rotate the graphics through button controls or pinching gestures (we recommended using the buttons as the pinch gestures you’d normally use don’t work too well here).
When you’re done, you can save the finished product to the iPhone’s photo album, email it, upload to Twitter, or upload to Facebook, all within the app.
Again, it’s a very basic app with a lot of limitations. For instance, it doesn’t support landscape photos, so you have to choose only sections of landscape photos to use. And you can’t add your own text—you have to use the graphics provided. But the graphics are not too bad.
Yes Apple fans it’s time to update your iTunes as Apple has now released iTunes 9.0.3 and is available through Software Updater reports an article over on the iphone blog.
The latest release of iTunes, iTunes 9.0.3 brings with it several important bug fixes which include iTunes will no longer ignore your ‘Remember password for purchase,’ settings; resolves an issue recognising with an iPod is connected.
iTunes 9.0.3 also addresses issues which affect performance and stability and addresses issues with syncing some Smart Playlists and Podcasts with your iPod.
So what are you waiting for, go grab iTunes 9.0.3 and feel free to come back and drop us a comment on how you find the new iTunes 9.0.3 update.
Google recently announced two new features for mobile users. The first feature allows you to call any number that’s inside a Google Adwords advertisement. This allows advertisers to measure how many people are calling directly from their mobile advertisements, and makes it easier for customers to get in touch with goods and services they find attractive.
Google also announced that popular images will now pop up on Google Image Search for mobile. If you navigate to www.google.com, from a mobile phone equipped with a full HTML web browser, and click “Images,” you’ll see a few thumbnails of popular ones that users have been viewing recently. The page displays popular images in categories like Trends, Movies, Sports, Cars, and more.
The next generation iPhone 4G has been in the news lately but thus far, nothing has been definite. In fact, no one has even come close to visualizing this next gen Apple device until some folks over at Nowhere Else took these rumors and put them in image form.
As you know, the iPhone 4G has been “rumored” to have an OLED display, a 5 megapixel camera, a front facing camera, a dual core processor and will be touch-sensitive. Also, a removable battery seems to be out of the picture since Apple is inclined to stick to its built-in batteries. Rumor or not, see the image (above) for yourself and be the judge!
Google has just announced that it’ll be launching a new version of the Google Voice web app, for Palm Pre and iPhone users. The upgrade provides a richer user experience and, as you can see, the interface looks great.
The new web app keeps the classic features of Google Voice: placing calls, sending texts, reading/listening to voicemails and messing with settings. What’s really neat about this app, unlike third party clients is that you can call out directly, so you won’t need to dial a number and receive a call back.
The update is available now and there’s a video below showing how the software works.
Good news for VoIP fans: the iCall VoIP iPhone app that was able to direct a GSM call to WiFi can now do VoIP over 3G connections. All previous restrictions regarding the calls were lifted, as found in the new iPhone SDK.
Till now, VoIP calls were only done over WiFi and not AT&T’s network, apparently not ready to support the burden of such calls. Now, iCall becomes 3G-friendly and it’s the only app in the App Store with this purpose. In case you’re wondering, the 3G restriction was a server-side block.