Navigon’s MobileNavigator is by far my favorite* iPhone GPS app – after reviewing an ad hoc distribution of it, I paid $69 to buy it (while it was on sale a little while ago) and have also purchased the traffic feature via an in-app purchase (also while it was on sale). Today, Navigon has made available several MyRegion versions of their navigation app which cover a portion of the U.S., each available for $24.99 (this is an introductory price and the regular price will be $29.99 after April 12).
Review of Sygic’s Mobile Maps navigation app for the iPhone
If you read my blog, you know that I’ve been waiting and waiting for a true turn-by-turn navigation app for the iPhone for some time now. Sygic put out one of the first comprehensive turn-by-turn apps earlier this month, and I’ve just completed my review of their Mobile Maps North America app (link opens iTunes). It’s not perfect, but it’s pretty damn good in my book, with enough features to make me want to retire my stand-alone TomTom Go 720 GPS device. Read my full review here.
First peek: Mobile Maps America navigation app by Sygic
I’ve been waiting for true voice-guided turn-by-turn apps for the iPhone for what feels like aeons now, and they’re starting to trickle into the App Store. The first one available for the U.S. was the Gokivo + Yahoo! Local Search app that requires an in-app purchase of $9.99 for each month of use. Next was the AT&T Navigator app, which also requires a monthly subscription fee of $9.99, billed to your AT&T account. Both of these apps rely heavily on the cellular network since no map data is stored locally on your iPhone, a not-so-ideal situation if you happen to travel through an area where coverage is spotty or nonexistent. TomTom and Navigon have promised navigation apps as well, but release dates for these are still unknown. Enter Sygic, who first gave a demo of their iPhone navigation app at Mobile World Congress in February, even before the iPhone SDK allowed for apps that could provide turn-by-turn voice guidance. +1o points to Sygic for moving forward despite that limitation, and they’re now rewarded with being one of the first apps of its kind in the U.S.
Dirty rotten developers
I have 136 apps for my iPhone in my iTunes library, of which 72 are actually on my iPhone at the moment. Once I get a new app, I try it out for a while to see if I like it and if I’m really using it regularly. If not, it comes off my iPhone, and I try to write a review for the App Store on it. Unfortunately, I’m falling far behind in that last task, but what can you do?
- Gazette, an RSS reader app by developer Matt Rajca, goes on sale in the App Store for $2.99 in October 2008.
- Reviews are fair to middling for the app and subsequent .0X updates. Many reviewers, including me, noted that syncing many feeds can take upwards of 15 minutes (NetNewsWire took only a couple of minutes comparatively for the same number of feeds for me). Rajca stated that this would be fixed in Gazette 2.0, with an ETA in January 2009.
- When asked if 2.0 would be a free upgrade, Rajca replied that it would be free to existing users, but would of course require a purchase to new customers.
- Gazette 2.0 is not released in January.
- In late March, Rajca posts that he’s still working on 2.0.
- More than 3 months later, Rajca announces that Gazette 2.0 has been submitted to the App Store in mid-June. However, it is no longer a free upgrade for current users, but will cost $2.99 for all customers.
- Gazette 1.0.4 has disappeared from the App Store, along with all of the reviews users had written about it.
My near-naked iPhone and a quick look at the first Google Voice app
The wonderful folks over at Proporta have sent me a few items to review and first up is their Maya case for my iPhone 3G (it will fit the iPod Touch and other products as well). My iPhone in its Incase Slider won’t fit into this case, which made me realize that my iPhone would need to be naked in order to use the Maya case enough to review it. I couldn’t bear that thought one little bit so I ordered a DecalGirl skin to give it at least some protection. This is not the first time I’ve used a DecalGirl skin, and while this brand wasn’t my first choice since there are others that cover more of the iPhone, they had the design I liked the best (courtesy of DecalGirl’s site):
- I had a small glitch setting it up – it wouldn’t let me scroll down to the email address field after entering my Google Voice number. I can make calls still, so the missing email address didn’t affect its operation.
- I never needed to enter my password to start making calls with the application. UPDATE: At first I thought this was a major security issue in that someone else could easily use only your Google Voice number to make calls on your account, but it turns out that your iPhone’s phone number must be registered with your Google Voice account, which makes it more secure.
- You can use this application instead of the original Phone application all the time – you can set it to ask you before making a call to use your Google Voice account or make the call through your cellular provider just as you would in the Phone app.