Category Archives: iphone app reviews
Review: iPhone 4
Review: iPhone 4 is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website
Overview
By now you have either had a few days to play with your new iPhone 4, or a few days to tell all of your friends that the iPhone 4 is stupid and you wouldn’t want one anyway (at least until your pre-ordered unit arrives sometime in late July). Either way the iPhone 4 is here and has utterly demolished the pre-sales records for its prior generation cousin the 3GS, which you have to admit is pretty awe-inspiring.
You’ve probably already read a review or five of Apple’s latest money press, but most reviews just after launch were based on having some hands on a unit for a day or two at most. I’ve been fondling mine for a week or so now (it arrived in the mail the day before retail launch, thank you Fedex!) so I thought I’d share my real-world experiences with the rest of you.
Features
You probably already know the thumbnail sketch of the latest wonder-phone, but I’ll do a quick run through just to get everyone up to speed:
- 2 cameras – 5MP on the back and VGA on the front, which is primarily used for…
- Facetime, Apple’s proprietary video chat app. I know Apple claims that it’s based on open standards, but I’ll cover that in more detail below.
- Rear-facing LED flash
- 720p video capture (and VGA output via an accessory purchase)
- iOS4 – more on that below
- 802.11n WiFi capable
- Faster processor (rumored to be the same chip used in the iPad)
- More memory (rumored to be double the 256M included in the iPad
- 960×480 Retina Display (again, more on that below)
- A gyroscope!
First Impressions
The first thing you notice when you open the box is how different the new iPhone looks from the older models. It’s square, flat, thinner than the 3GS, and there’s the new dot on the front face for the Facetime camera. When you pick it up for the first time you may feel a bit like you’re picking up a space brick made of glass and aluminum. It’s radical new design (radically different from the old iPhone designs, anyway) gives it a solid feeling in your hands, while the metal and glass construction make you feel like you’re holding something from another planet. Activation is easy if this is your first iPhone, you simply hook it up your computer and follow the prompts in iTunes. If you are migrating from another iPhone the prepare to spend a couple hours not just activating but migrating all of your old data, photo, videos, apps, and music. It kind of kills the new iPhone buzz.
The next thing you’ll notice is the beauty and crispness of the display, it truly is sharper and clearer than any mobile display you’ve ever seen. The iPhone 4 is also noticeably faster than any smartphone on the market, even the latest high-end Android phones that I’ve played around with. Every action is smooth and instantaneous, especially when you factor in the new app-switcher and multitasking features in iOS4 and the ability to categorize apps into folders on your home screen.
The phone feels solid in your hand, like every square centimeter of space inside is packed with… something important, I’m sure. You may also unfortunately feel like I do, which is that it is so densely packed with glass and goodness that one little drop to the floor will utterly demolish it. I have however dropped it at least twice so you can lay that fear to rest, if I do finally destroy it I’ll update this review and let you know.
Hardware & Performance
With its faster processor and greater memory, the device is definitely faster than its predecessor and even faster than the iPad (which kind of makes your iPad feel a bit inadequate). The new, higher resolution camera is coupled with a larger internal light sensor that supposedly gathers more light, and the
difference shows. Pictures taken with the rear-facing camera are more vibrant and sharper than older iPhone models. The new LED flash is also a welcome addition to the hardware spec, at least giving you the option to take pictures when out on the town (though they come out about as well as can be expected with a camera-phone and LED flash).
As I mentioned before, the new iPhone is fast. Large apps (mostly games) will take less than half the time to load as before, snapping pictures is almost instantaneous (there is basically no discernible shutter lag at all), and web pages render much faster (subject to your internet speed, of course). I’ve also noticed that the built-in speakers seem much louder than my 3GS, though the quality of sound itself hasn’t necessarily improved much.
The major hardware change that everyone is talking (and arguing) about is the extension of the antennae to the outside of the device itself. The different antennae are arranged as three aluminum bands around the outside of the iPhone, lending it an old-fashioned squarish look and giving it a solid frame to surround its considerable heft.
The Retina Display is also a popular argument topic. Steve Jobs stated in his WWDC keynote that when held at a standard distance (around 12″) the human retina does not have the resolution to discern pixels on the iPhone’s display. In everyday terms, this means that the new display resolution is amazing. The most notable difference is in the resolution of text: if an app uses Apple’s text rendering technology then no update is needed to take advantage of this new feature. Text is noticeably more readable on the iPhone 4 without even having an older iPhone to compare it to. Even a week later I’m pleased every time I browse my RSS feeds or read my book in the Kindle app.
With the new antennae arrangement comes a promise of better call quality (or at least better call reliability). In the week that I’ve had mine I’ve only experienced one dropped call, and that was in an area known to have very poor cell quality for AT&T and while in a call with another AT&T user. I haven’t kept detailed records of my dropped call history but it does seem that this phone is performing better than my old one.
Other than that the device is very familiar: you plug in headphones on the top, where there is also a power button. The dock connector and speakers are on the bottom. The volume buttons and ringer switch are on the left as you hold the device in your hand. The only other notable change is that the SIM card slot has been moved to the right-hand side.
Software
The iPhone hardware changing every June is a given; the real substantial difference this summer is the launch of iOS4. It includes notable features that people have been clamoring for practically since the iPhone’s launch: multitasking and app folders. Those two features are also available on the 3GS if you choose to update to iOS4. Facetime is included in iOS4 only for the iPhone 4.
Folders are handled intuitively and work well: you simply tap and hold an
icon until they wiggle and jiggle, then drag an app icon on top of another to create a new folder for them. By default the folder is named after the category of the dragged app, but you have the option to change this as well. When tapping a folder it slides open like a drawer, showing you the apps inside. A nice touch is that the folder icons on the home screen give you tiny previews of the apps contained inside, giving you a quick idea of what’s in there so you’re not playing hunt-and-peck with your app icons.
Multitasking is not handled exactly the same as in a Windows Mobile or Android phone. Apps are not truly running constantly in the background; instead, developers are given a specific set of APIs that allow them to have certain tasks continue to run in the background after leaving an app. For instance, in Dropbox or Evernote you could start an item uploading or downloading, then leave the app to do something else; or the best example yet, you can listen to music in Pandora while performing other tasks.
Now when double-tapping the Home button a drawer slides open at the bottom of the screen, showing you your most recent apps.
This works on any screen in any app. A quick swipe to the right will show you music controls and the orientation lock button. Good news for Pandora (or other music app) fans: the music controls work on the iPod as well as Pandora, depending on what app is currently playing the audio.
Now for the glamour app, Facetime. At first I thought this was the app I wanted with me on my cross-country road trip, so that I could have left my laptop at home. Unfortunately it’s not quite ready for prime time.
The idea is simple: you start a phone call and then tap the Facetime button to initiate a video call. You can switch between both cameras during the call, which is nice, but you can only place the video call over WiFi, which is not. Another problem is that currently Facetime only works from iPhone 4 to iPhone 4, so you better start talking your family and friends into buying them.
The Facetime app is based on standards in use throughout the video calling industry, though not “open” standards as Steve Jobs stated in his keynote. I’m assuming (more like hoping) that other software vendors start putting in the tools necessary to connect to iPhone 4 users from desktop and web-based software, but for now it’s strictly between iPhone 4 handsets and WiFi only.
Cons
I have only a “Cons” section, since you’ve no doubt noticed that this entire review is more or less “Pro” iPhone 4.
- Antenna issues – The external antenna array is causing problems for a lot of users, because of the issue with bridging the connections between different antennae while holding the device. You can get around this by holding it differently (Apple’s suggestion, naturally) or by simply getting a case for the device. One thing about getting a case: they’re all backordered too, until mid-July. I don’t have one yet either and there are a couple dings on my phone to show for it.
- Facetime – I covered this a bit already, but the main issues with Facetime are that it’s currently WiFi only and iPhone 4 only.
- Weird blank email – I’ve had on several occasions an issue where emails show up as blank on the iPhone email client. Luckily, with multitasking came the ability to kill running apps (tap and hold an app in the quick launch tray, you get the wiggly apps, then you tap the red icon to kill a running app), which is what I have to do each time this happens to get my readable email back. It’s strange and annoying, but doesn’t happen too often and is easy to fix.
- Battery life – Though the battery life on this one seems better than my old 3GS, I think we all need to face facts: when you use a powerful smartphone that is basically a pocket computer, battery life is generally the first thing to go in the face of raw power. We can probably only pick one or the other. There’s just not a lot of room inside those little cases for big batteries.
- The higher resolution camera means photos take much longer to save to the Camera Roll. What used to be instant now takes a few seconds.
Overall
There are a handful of other features that I haven’t touched on here, including camera enhancements like digital zoom, as well as the new gyroscope. In the case of the digital zoom it’s because you should avoid digital zoom like the plague in all cases and I wish that it could be taken out, while I simply have not had a chance to play a game that uses the new gyroscope’s capabilities.
The bottom line here is that if you’re an iPhone lover you will love this phone, though if you have a 3GS and the iOS4 update you won’t be missing any features except the Retina display and Facetime. I found that my old 3GS actually runs faster with the new iOS4.
Non-iPhone users may find that this is the model that actually wins them over: it’s the first iPhone that’s felt to me to really have caught up with what the rest of the phone industry is doing with their handsets, and it’s only taken four iterations in which to do so.
iPhone haters can move along: it’s definitely a better phone than the prior models, but the same basic formula is in effect. If you don’t like the old iPhones than you probably won’t like this either.
The iPhone brand overall is easy and fun to use, and the iPhone 4 adds new hardware and software features that simply make it an even more enjoyable phone to have.
iPhone App Review: iDiscrete
iPhone App Review: iDiscrete is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website
The beauty of an active developer community is that occasionally you see brilliant sparks of innovation in seemingly simple applications.
The concept behind iDiscrete is not new, and is well-represented in the App Store. It is an application which allows you to securely and privately store documents (including TXT, PDF, DOC, XLS, and PPT), images, and videos. You can import them from their respective iPhone apps or import them via a WiFi connected web browser on a computer.
The real genius with iDiscrete however is the way in which you access the app. Instead of being presented with a passcode screen (which practically screams “I have videos here that I don’t want anyone to know I have!”), upon tapping the app icon you see an animated loading screen. You then tap in several predetermined areas on this loading screen in order to access the app’s main content. If you fail to enter the “code” within the allotted time (configurable from within the app itself) you are instead presented with a basic note-taking “app”. The name of the app itself is even discrete, it’s simply called “ID” on your home screen.
The beauty and simplicity of this access method is so great that it makes me wonder how impossible it is that nobody else though of it before. With this app not only can you hide certain content on your phone, you can even hide the fact that it’s even there and hidden in the first place.
There’s even a clever backdoor in case you forget the tap access sequence. You define an unlock phrase that, when entered into the dummy “notepad app”, clears all security features of the app and lets you access the content. From there you can re-set your passcode and access phrase. Genius.
The app has a few flaws:
- It seems to have no password protection on the WiFi interface, which for a security app seems like a strange omission.
- There also does not seem to be a “keep awake” function for the WiFi access, meaning you may have to keep tapping it when working through the web interface or turn off sleep on your iPhone entirely.
- It seems that the content within the app itself is not encrypted (or if it is they don’t advertise that fact).
Overall, iDiscrete is a great app in its category, and the developers seem to have great features planned for including in future releases. As it stands now the app is well worth getting if you’re looking for not only a secure place to keep information you would rather keep private, but also to keep private the fact that you have secure information on your device in the first place.
iPhone App Review: Chinese Food In Minutes
iPhone App Review: Chinese Food In Minutes is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website
Chinese Food In Minutes is a cooking app that has recipes and video from the UK television show of the same name. The show follows Ching He Huang as she coaches two people in each episode, who have never cooked Chinese cuisine before, through three complimentary dishes.
The iOS app features recipes from all 13 episodes, one-touch menu creation from the recipes, instant shopping lists from your recipes (with the ability to leave out duplicate items), and even some video clips from the show demonstrating cooking techniques for a select few dishes.
When you first load the app it plays a short introductory video which has no means of being skipped. This worried me a bit since there was no length indicator so I had no way of knowing how long I was stuck watching, but the clip was short and you are only forced to sit through it once.
Once inside the app you are presented with two ways to view the recipes: by category or by episode. You can also search by dish name or ingredient, and filter the results to only include dishes that have prep and cooking time of less than some arbitrary amount of your choosing.
Each recipe includes cooking time in the title, so you can quickly scan the list if you don’t know what you’re looking for. Then you simply add a dishes to your favorites list or the menu for the night. From within the Menu screen you can have the app suggest items to compliment a dish which you’ve already chosen. From with each Recipe you can view a summary that includes prep and cook time, an ingredients list, and of course step by step cooking instructions (and some recipes include a video from the series). The ingredients list can be added to the in-app shopping list with a tap.
The Shopping List sorts items by recipe or by grocery aisle, and has an “Email this shopping list” button on the screen as well if you want to shoot off the list to have someone else to do the shopping.
Pros
- full-featured recipe app
- attractive design
- one-tap shopping list from each recipe (that also offers to leave off duplicate items!)
- menu suggestion from one main dish
- handful of videos are helpful if you’ve never seen the show
- settings allows choice of Imperial or Metric units (essential feature but could have been neglected or simply set based on which country you bought the app from)
- Recipes seem simple to follow hard to mess up, though I’m sure I’d find a way if I tried hard enough
Cons
- smallish set of recipes, since they are drawn only from the 13-episode run of the show, and the app does not feature all recipes from the show (not sure why)
- only one soup (it’s traditional hot and sour, so at least I can try my hand at that!)
- App is a bit pricey considering the small number of recipes, and that the competition is free and features an essentially unlimited set of recipes drawn from various websites. Then again, these are specialized dishes from a renowned chef (in the UK, anyway), and cookbooks are generally far more expensive.
Final Thoughts
Since Chinese Food In Minutes only offers 29 recipes, it seems a bit on the high-priced side for a recipe app. Overall however it is very well designed and the recipes seem interesting and easy to prepare. The app itself gets out of your way, letting you get right to shopping for and preparing a meal with just a few taps. If your mouth is watering after seeing the dishes described in the show’s Wikipedia article, then you will not be sorry you bought this app.
iPhone App Review: The Habit Factor®
iPhone App Review: The Habit Factor® is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website
Solidifying an action into a regular habit takes discipline and awareness. You need to know for certain how you are performing in your habit formation and be able to track that over time. If you can’t compare your current behavior to your prior behavior, then how do you know that your new habit is really “taking hold”?
There are a lot of apps in the App Store that simply track habits, but The Habit Factor bills itself as “a new paradigm through which you… assess all of your habits… and intentionally craft new habits to enhance achievement and create your ideal future — your success.” It promises to help you achieve “more in less time, far easier than you ever imagined possible.” Wow.
So does The Habit Factor achieve its own lofty goals? I don’t think it’s really possible to evaluate that in a review setting: I can’t dedicate the potentially weeks necessary to form a new habit, and too much is dependent on the personal characteristics of the reviewer (and I am personally terrible at breaking bad habits and forming good ones). So for this review I’ll just focus on the app and how it differentiates itself from other habit-tracking apps out there.
Features
The Habit Factor is deep and complex app. It allows you to:
- track habits on a daily basis
- relate any number of habits to a goal, as well as any number of goals to a habit
- associate each habit with one of four core pillars: mind, body, spirit, and social
- have the app track each habit on any day of the week (say, cardio workouts Monday through Friday but strength training only on Monday, Wednesday, Friday)
- generate and email detailed overview reports for each goal and habit
- generate and email a “streak” overview, which shows check-marks on a calendar to see your “habit streaks” graphically
- share your goals with your Twitter and Facebook followers
- plus tons of other added features too numerous to mention
Pros
The Habit Factor is nothing if not thorough: you can share your goals on social sites, add images to goals to help you visualize your success, add comments to each day’s habit tracking to give you added details on each day’s success (or failure, I suppose).
The app is also flexible, allowing you to customize when you see your target habits (every day or just the days you have checked off in the habit setup), show your un-met habits as an app badge, track habits through a specific end date or out to infinity; again, there are dozens of other little tidbits I can’t list in detail.
The Habit Factor is also a system of sorts, which the app itself is built around. Although the associating of habits with goals is fully optional to use the app, it is highly recommended by the developer (and by myself, if this is truly the app for you) that you do so. Some habits by themselves are fine: stop smoking, jog 5 miles everyday. But to truly get the most out of forming new habits for yourself they should be set in the context of overall goals to give the habits a purpose and to give you something to focus on. The Habit Factor recognizes this connection and stresses it throughout the process.
Cons
As I mentioned above, The Habit Factor is not just a tracking app but an entire system. If you don’t buy into the system itself or use the optional goal-tracking aspect of it, you may be dealing with way more interface overhead than you need to simply stop biting your nails.
Though I did initially find the app itself a bit overwhelming to me at first, I also didn’t take my own advice and read the “About” section, which would have taught me exactly how to use all of the features and options. It’s not a hard app to use but do yourself a favor and learn how to use it!
Overall
One thing about using an app to help with your habits is that if the system isn’t right for you, you won’t have success with your habit-forming goals. If you don’t like using the app then you won’t use it to help form your new habits, setting yourself up for failure.
Though the lite version is out there for you to evaluate the system itself, the full version of The Habit Factor is definitely a good bet for anyone looking to help form or modify their habits and achieve greater goals in their life.
iPhone App Review: iQuarters
iPhone App Review: iQuarters is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website
Features
iQuarters features passable 3-D graphics and physics to simulate the tossing of a quarter into an increasingly difficult series of glasses and bottles. You have a limited number of quarters to complete all 12 levels, and completing a level takes three successful throws. On each level there is generally an easy shot that you can make three times easily, but as the difficulty increases you are offered greater challenges for more points. You can also play a multi-player game with up to four people by passing the iPad around. or You can also play a multi-player game with up to four people by passing the iPad around.
Pros
iQuarters has decent 3-D graphics and seems to have good physics, or at least good enough to accurately tell whether you landed the quarter in the glass or not. It’s a simple game but one that does well at helping you pass the time without much thought. The levels are well-designed and as challenging as they ought to be in a game like this, which is really not very. You don’t play this game to be frustrated, you play to pass the time and try to beat your own prior score.
It’s single best feature though is that it’s a universal app for iPhone, iPod Touch, and iPad. You get a much better tavern-gaming experience on the iPad simply by virtue of the size of the screen. The quarter is basically drawn at real-life scale.
Cons
The only niggling problem I had with the game was that the toss of the quarter doesn’t seem 100% accurate. When you flick your finger to throw the coin it seems to only be able to launch in a few pre-determined angles. It’s not a huge deal given that the level design rarely offers more than a few targets but it seems to be a missed opportunity for more creative levels.
While on the subject of levels it would also be nice to include more levels (there are only 12 in this game) and a level designer in a future update.
Overall
iQuarters is a nice little game to pass the time with a group of friends. It’s simplicity offers little challenge to the average player but is a good time-waster for adults, or even a decent game for children.
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iPhone App Review: Jigsaw Live: AR Puzzle
iPhone App Review: Jigsaw Live: AR Puzzle is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website
Have you ever been doing a nice big beautiful puzzle and thought to yourself, “This is way too easy, I wish the picture was constantly moving as if a video camera were supplying the image…”?
Well now you can fulfill that dream with Jigsaw Live from XMG Studios, the developers that created the excellent Drag Racer: Pro Tuner. Jigsaw Live takes the feed from your iPhone’s camera and creates one of several different styles of puzzles for you to solve. The twist is that rather than just take a picture and break it into pieces, the video feed from your iPhone 3GS supplies a live, moving image to each piece of the puzzle. It’s an astounding technical accomplishment I’m sure, but is it fun?
Pros
- The app is rock solid and well-designed, though I did have a challenge starting it up one time when I had a bad network connection.
- It has four different shapes of puzzle pieces, as well as 5 different levels of difficulty, so you have dozens of options to choose from.
- When the correct pieces are near one another they lock together, and upon completing a picture you can Tweet the picture or post it on Facebook from within the app.
- You can even freeze the picture if the movement is just getting way too hard.
Cons
- The puzzle shapes are pretty easy. The app offers squares, horizontal and vertical strips, and an assortment of random shapes inspired by Tetris blocks.
Bottom Line
Jigsaw Live is a great diversion for puzzle lovers and maybe even parents with kids that need a distraction. It seems a bit like a proof of concept at this point, offering only basic puzzle shapes and a low-resolution video image. At the price for what you get though, it is very tough to pass up.
iPhone App Review: Ambinator
iPhone App Review: Ambinator is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website
Ambinator is an app that plays high quality ambient sounds for the purpose of meditation, relaxation, or background noise for traveling. This app is simple and straight forward with the features that it offers the user.
Ambinator pros:
By using this app I notice how much time must have gone into the idea and implementation of the Ambinator. It has a floating ball in the center of the screen that maneuvers around the screen to cause the sounds to evolve and change over time. You can also manually maneuver the floating ball to mix the sounds up at your continence. The Ambinator has preloaded arrangements that you can listen to or you can customize the sounds by adding from a bank of individual sounds. One big positive thing that I notice about this app is that the sounds are very high quality and it is not just a loop of the same old stuff over and over.
Ambinator Cons:
One big con is that this app costs $1.99 and that is about $1.99 over what it should be. There is absolutely no reason that I saw that this app couldn’t be free and simply make money from its sponsors. This reason alone would cause me to not suggest this app for the average user.
This app is well put together and well thought out. I was not impressed however with its seemingly unwarranted price. I would only recommend this app to someone who really enjoys ambient sound generators and is looking to drop and unnecessary $1.99.

Pros:
- Controls look and function good
- Sounds are customizable
- Ambient sound is high quality
Cons:
- Cost is overboard
I give this app a 4/10 because no matter how good it sounds it is WAY over priced for an app of its category.
iPhone App Review: Groove
iPhone App Review: Groove is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website
Listening to music on your iPhone or iPod Touch is probably something that 90% of device owners love to do, and Apple’s iPod application is a fairly well-designed way to access all of your music and playlists quickly and easily. Groove, by developer Zikera, is better. It combines a huge list of features that you didn’t even realize were missing from your iPod in a well-designed package that gives you one-tap access to incredible playlists.
Features
On the surface you could call Groove a Pandora app for your internal iTunes music library. It builds playlists with a single touch from songs or artists that you love, or you can tap “Surprise Me” and let Groove build a playlist out of the music that you love. You can definitely build smart playlists like this in iTunes and transfer them over, but Groove does this all on the fly and with a single tap for most playlists, so that you can listen to your music in a fresh way.
Groove also has some nice playlists options on the startup page that give you new ways to experience your music: ”Three of a Kind” plays three songs at a time by the same artist, ”Artist Duos” creates playlists from two artists that go well together, and ”Favorites” just plays your favorite songs.
Groove also has a few nifty features that set it apart, like the ability to change songs and volume with a swipe on the screen (left/right for song change, up/down for volume). It will download artist images and missing artwork if it has a data connection. Groove can even keep playing the music in the background while you use other apps since it’s actually just a playlist front-end for your local iTunes library.
Pros
- Good for minimal interaction while driving: swipe gestures, large-type on songs.
- Play favorite music with one tap on the app, no poking around in your entire library for a song and then tapping the “Genius” button.
- Play your custom iTunes playlists in Groove and enjoy the gesture controls.
Cons
- Cannot save playlists unless you buy the paid version. Sad Face.
Wrap-Up
Groove is like the Genius button and Pandora had a love-child. It creates much more interesting and creative playlists than any custom-made or smart playlists in iTunes, with far less effort, even on a song library as small as my own. It’s free, so if you have any music at all on your device just go get it.
iPhone App Review: Promise2Pray
iPhone App Review: Promise2Pray is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website
Have you ever found yourself awake at night babbling aimlessly at the ceiling and not making a clear objective? Have you ever thought to pray for someone and forgot what their request was? Prayer is a powerful tool for a believer i used correctly. Often times a person may use a journal to help with organizing and recollection of their prayer list. This app is an electronic prayer journal that will assist the user in recalling their prayers, help to organize them into categories and acts as a reminder to the user.
Promise2Pray Pros:
I first started using this app a few days ago with expectations of a simple little app that would look good and ultimately not be used by myself. So far I have only seen the benefit from using Promise2Pray. The first thing that I have noticed simply was the amount of prayer requests that I had in my head seemed much larger when written down in this app. You can sort through your prayer list by category such as “Petition” and “Thanksgiving”. This was neat because it helped me visualize where my struggles and blessings are in my life. Beyond the capability to just categorize prayer, it has functions to: add prayers for the future, add contact info for someone you are praying for, search archived prayer, and add categories of prayer to sort into. It does all of this and still manages to look and function great.
Promise2Pray Cons:
One minor thing that I would like to see Promise2Pray have is contact photos. This is definitely not a necessity for this app but some people may like to associate a face with their prayers. Another great upgrade to this app would be the ability to password protect certain prayers. I say this because I prayed for guidance in considering proposing to my (now) wife a few years ago and if I was using an app like this at the time; her stumbling upon it may have ruined the surprise. Push notification would be a welcomed add to this app to remind the user of important dates in their prayer lists.
I did like Promise2Pray a lot. I was right in my initial assumption that it would be a great looking and functioning app but I was very wrong when it came to personal usefulness. I see myself using Promise2Pray for a long time and would recommend this app to anyone who is looking for some organization of their prayers and a great way to be reminded of what to be praying for.

Pros:
- Categories
- View archived prayers
- View Future prayers
- Ability to add contact info
- Helps with overall organization of prayers
Cons:
- Contacts can’t add photos
- No password protection for sensitive prayer
- No push notifications
I give this app an 7/10 for looking great and potential long term usefulness, but still needs a few upgrades
iPhone App Review: Wider Clock
iPhone App Review: Wider Clock is a post from: Best Iphone Apps Review Website
The clock that Apple included in the iPhone tells the time, but that is pretty much it. That leaves a wide open field for more functional or attractive clock apps to attract an audience. Wider Clock falls into the latter category, offering a set of beautiful clock-face alternatives to grace the screen of your iPhone or iPod Touch.
It doesn’t offer any new functionality or any groundbreaking features, but Wider Clock has everything you would expect in a clock app: multiple clocks in different time zones, alarms, and a couple of extra minor additions that add to the overall look and feel of the app. The clock images though are the real star of the show, and the developers have chosen beautiful and stylish images to accompany their app.
The program has a couple of quirks: scrolling through multiple screens of clocks sometimes doesn’t work, and from time to time the dots indicating how many “pages” of time zones I have shows one more than necessary. I would also like to see more themes added with regular updates, given that the app has a slightly higher price than you might expect for a clock app.
All in all though Wider Clock is a nice, attractive clock replacement for your Apple handheld.
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