Our favorite iOS Apps, June edition
Just as we did in May,
Macworld staffers got together to chat about the best apps they’ve been
using recently. Here are some that have recently captured our
imaginations (and perhaps a spot on our homescreens), whether they’re
tiny apps from budding developers or the top-grossing apps that everyone
is using. Our hope is that, while you might recognize some of these
apps, others you might never have encountered. All of them, we think,
are worth a look.
Chris Breen: Audubon Nature California
When not tethered to my computer, I like to spend time hiking around
the beautiful natural environment that surrounds my home in the Monterey
Bay Area. There’s only so much grandeur one can endure, however,
without eventually dismissing it as yet another lovely landscape. For
this reason, I like to devote portions of my attention to exactly what
I’m looking at—a bird, wildflower, insect, tree, or seashell. I can do
exactly that with the help of Green Mountain Digital’s $5 Audubon Nature California.
Because the flora and fauna it lists is confined to my home state, it
needn’t pack its database with shrubs and critters that aren’t normally
found here; this makes identifying things a bit easier. Like Green
Mountain Digital’s other Audubon guides, it allows you to browse by
shape, family, and name as well as provide an advanced feature where you
can select such information as shape, habitat, color, and size to help
narrow your search. You can additionally keep lists of your sightings,
and—with a free NatureShare account—share the location of your finds
with others. If you don’t happen to live in California, don’t fret:
There are Audubon guides for other regions as well, including New
England, Texas, Southwest, Mid-Atlantic, and Rocky Mountain.
Serenity Caldwell: GIFwrapped
Since I’ve already reviewed one GIF-making app this week, I might as well keep up the trend. This month’s recommendation, GIFwrapped, is a little app I picked up from Federico Viticci over at MacStories, who raved about it
back in February. It’s a great app to store and quickly find GIFs you
want to share with your buddies, and the Dropbox sync options keep them
out of your iPhone or iPad’s photo library and in the cloud, so that
they don’t continually clog up space.
Dan Frakes: Disney Karaoke - Frozen
If you have a daughter between the ages of 3 and 10—or, heck, pretty
much any family member of any gender or age—there’s a good chance you’ve
heard them singing the now-all-too-familiar refrains of “Let It Go,”
“Do You Want to Build a Snowman?” or one of the many other earworms from Disney’s Frozen. (As the father of multiple such girls, 2014 has doomed me to hearing these songs over, and over, and over.)
Pervasiveness aside, I have to admit that I don’t mind the songs all
that much, especially when sung by my own flesh and blood. Which is why
my girls and I have both taken a liking to Disney Karaoke: Frozen,
the latest in Disney’s series of iOS apps that let you sing—and record
yourself singing—over the melodies of your favorite Disney tunes. Just
launch the app and tap one of the nine included songs, and you see
what’s essentially a music video (composed of clips from the movie),
with the song’s lyrics displayed on the screen; a bouncing snowflake
helps you keep in sync. Pressing the play button lets you listen to the
original vocals; pressing record lets you record your own voice, with
your recordings saved to a searchable gallery of tracks. (You get better
results using headphones to avoid picking up the original audio through
the microphone.) You can disable or enable the original vocals in
either mode.
You can’t rewind a song while practicing (other than all the way to
the beginning), or expand the video to full screen while watching or
recording—the app’s large bars of button are always visible—but the app
is fun, easy to use, and it’s full of Frozen. My kids think it’s awesome, and though they can’t get me to sing, I admit to a lot of smiles.
Roman Loyola: Snapfish
There are lots of online photo hosting sites to choose from, but few
have mobile apps that not only let you view your photos, but also make
and order products from those images. Snapfish
does just that, and it recently redesigned its iOS app, to boot. But
the main reason I use it is because Snapfish gives new users of the app
100 free 4 by 6 inch prints a month for one year (you pay for shipping).
You must order through the app to get the free prints, but you can use
images from your Snapfish account, the photos on your iOS device, or
pictures on your Instragram, Facebook, or Flickr accounts. If you want
to take advantage of the deal, you have to download and use the app
before June 15. (Snapfish actually started to offer this deal in April
and they’ve extended the deadline threes times, so if you’re reading
this after June 15, it won’t hurt to check the Snapfish website to see if the deal is still available.)
Dan Moren: Flappy Golf
I confess, I missed out on the Flappy Bird craze. I was even hesitant to load up Flappy Golf, though it came from a trusted source—the developers of one of my favorite games, Super Stickman Golf 2—and
I was constantly pestered about it by my colleagues. Honestly, I don’t
know why I waited so long. The game borrows from company’s original golf
title, but changes the mechanic: Instead of playing the part of a
little stick figure golfer you are the ball, and you must flap
your way into the hole—in as few flaps as possible. It’s surprisingly
fun and addictive, and as long as you don’t mind a couple ads, free!
Chris Breen: Audubon Nature California
When not tethered to my computer, I like to spend time hiking around the beautiful natural environment that surrounds my home in the Monterey Bay Area. There’s only so much grandeur one can endure, however, without eventually dismissing it as yet another lovely landscape. For this reason, I like to devote portions of my attention to exactly what I’m looking at—a bird, wildflower, insect, tree, or seashell. I can do exactly that with the help of Green Mountain Digital’s $5 Audubon Nature California.
Because the flora and fauna it lists is confined to my home state, it needn’t pack its database with shrubs and critters that aren’t normally found here; this makes identifying things a bit easier. Like Green Mountain Digital’s other Audubon guides, it allows you to browse by shape, family, and name as well as provide an advanced feature where you can select such information as shape, habitat, color, and size to help narrow your search. You can additionally keep lists of your sightings, and—with a free NatureShare account—share the location of your finds with others. If you don’t happen to live in California, don’t fret: There are Audubon guides for other regions as well, including New England, Texas, Southwest, Mid-Atlantic, and Rocky Mountain.
Serenity Caldwell: GIFwrapped
Since I’ve already reviewed one GIF-making app this week, I might as well keep up the trend. This month’s recommendation, GIFwrapped, is a little app I picked up from Federico Viticci over at MacStories, who raved about it back in February. It’s a great app to store and quickly find GIFs you want to share with your buddies, and the Dropbox sync options keep them out of your iPhone or iPad’s photo library and in the cloud, so that they don’t continually clog up space.
Dan Frakes: Disney Karaoke - Frozen
If you have a daughter between the ages of 3 and 10—or, heck, pretty much any family member of any gender or age—there’s a good chance you’ve heard them singing the now-all-too-familiar refrains of “Let It Go,” “Do You Want to Build a Snowman?” or one of the many other earworms from Disney’s Frozen. (As the father of multiple such girls, 2014 has doomed me to hearing these songs over, and over, and over.)
Pervasiveness aside, I have to admit that I don’t mind the songs all that much, especially when sung by my own flesh and blood. Which is why my girls and I have both taken a liking to Disney Karaoke: Frozen, the latest in Disney’s series of iOS apps that let you sing—and record yourself singing—over the melodies of your favorite Disney tunes. Just launch the app and tap one of the nine included songs, and you see what’s essentially a music video (composed of clips from the movie), with the song’s lyrics displayed on the screen; a bouncing snowflake helps you keep in sync. Pressing the play button lets you listen to the original vocals; pressing record lets you record your own voice, with your recordings saved to a searchable gallery of tracks. (You get better results using headphones to avoid picking up the original audio through the microphone.) You can disable or enable the original vocals in either mode.
You can’t rewind a song while practicing (other than all the way to the beginning), or expand the video to full screen while watching or recording—the app’s large bars of button are always visible—but the app is fun, easy to use, and it’s full of Frozen. My kids think it’s awesome, and though they can’t get me to sing, I admit to a lot of smiles.
Roman Loyola: Snapfish
There are lots of online photo hosting sites to choose from, but few have mobile apps that not only let you view your photos, but also make and order products from those images. Snapfish does just that, and it recently redesigned its iOS app, to boot. But the main reason I use it is because Snapfish gives new users of the app 100 free 4 by 6 inch prints a month for one year (you pay for shipping). You must order through the app to get the free prints, but you can use images from your Snapfish account, the photos on your iOS device, or pictures on your Instragram, Facebook, or Flickr accounts. If you want to take advantage of the deal, you have to download and use the app before June 15. (Snapfish actually started to offer this deal in April and they’ve extended the deadline threes times, so if you’re reading this after June 15, it won’t hurt to check the Snapfish website to see if the deal is still available.)
Dan Moren: Flappy Golf
I confess, I missed out on the Flappy Bird craze. I was even hesitant to load up Flappy Golf, though it came from a trusted source—the developers of one of my favorite games, Super Stickman Golf 2—and I was constantly pestered about it by my colleagues. Honestly, I don’t know why I waited so long. The game borrows from company’s original golf title, but changes the mechanic: Instead of playing the part of a little stick figure golfer you are the ball, and you must flap your way into the hole—in as few flaps as possible. It’s surprisingly fun and addictive, and as long as you don’t mind a couple ads, free!
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