When MrsG-T gave me an iPhone 3G as a birthday present back in late 2008 I didn’t realise the worlds it would open up to me. Leaving aside facilities that have become fairly commonplace in mobiles now (camera, sat nav, music player, telephone calls) here are ten things that I discovered in 2009 and which I use regularly.

Note: as this site is approved by Apple Inc, I get a small commission if you buy any of the apps below through this site (unless they’re free!). All links open in iTunes. Click the logos!


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Communicating with friends old and new

Surprise! The first use is communicating. With a phone! Who would have thought…

It’s clear from the general media view that many people don’t ‘get’ Twitter. Personally I’ve come into contact with people from different countries, different denominations and different interests, and made some fascinating friends. Twittelator Pro is only one of many Twitter apps available in the App Store, but it’s the one I keep coming back to as it has some great features.

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Tuning your guitar

This is the most useful music app that I’ve come across. If you play guitar (or bass, or mandolin, or ukelele!) then you need this app. It turns your iPhone into a guitar tuner, allowing you to choose from a variety of different types of guitar and has different tunings available too. In addition it has selectable chord charts which show you fingering patterns as well as allowing you to hear what the chord should sound like. You can even place virtual fingers on a fretboard and find out what the name of a chord you discovered is. Relatively expensive, but brilliant.


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Checking your speed

In these days of speed cameras, especially the newer average speed versions that seem to be all over the motorways, keeping an eye on your velocity has never been more critical if you want to retain a driving licence (and money!) There are a couple of speed apps available but I like this one best. Ignore the 1-star reviews as they appear to be written by people who don’t know how to work the GPS function on an iPhone.

The app shows your speed in big numbers, white on black, along with the compass direction you’re travelling. It can also show your average speed.


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Identifying That Piece Of Music

You’re sitting in a bar and a piece of music comes onto the sound system which you like but have no idea what it is. Simply fire up Shazam and hit the ‘tag’ button. 20 seconds later (if you have network coverage) you should know the song, the artist, the label, when it was published and have a link to download it from iTunes. I tried this on the pre-show music at a live show and it told me about an album called Test-card Favourites!

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Creating and Storing Passwords

If you’re going to try and have any kind of secure strategy for passwords, you’ll quickly discover that it’s impossible to remember them all. Writing them down defeats the purpose of having them, so try 1Password. It allows you to store all your passwords in one app, sync them with a Mac (sorry PC users!), and fill in user IDs on stored websites without having them stored in your web browser.

It’ll also generate random passcodes using Alphanumeric, numbers and special characters if you choose them, and store them against a web URL.

The latest version also has an area where you can store software licence codes, which is a god-send for all those shareware apps!


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Blogging

Obviously I have a blog (clue: you’re reading it now), but one of the annoying things about it is having to be near a computer to post to it. In the past I’ve tried other ways of blogging remotely but they’ve never been as effective as iBlogger. With this you can post formatted articles with pictures, hyperlinks, tag them and add categories (which you’ve already set up in your master blog).

Setting up with WordPress was a little tricky until I found out about the atom/xml enabling that you had to do, but if you choose to read the instructions you’ll probably find it easier than I did!


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Monitoring Sleep Patterns

This app is amazing – genuinely something that surprised me. I read about it on Chris Hinton’s Geek Speak blog, tried it and have found it to revoluionise my waking up each morning. It monitors your sleep patterns and if it recognises that you’re waking up within 30 minutes of your alarm time it’ll gently bring you out of your slumber. I checked the graph patterns with various child visits during the night and the peaks and troughs appear to be bang on.


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Checking The Weather

I ride a motorcycle, and I much prefer to ride on nice sunny days without too much wind and with a very low probability of rain. The iPhone has a weather app built in, but Fizz Weather tells you a lot more about what’s going on near you. It can store multiple locations, give graphs of rainfall, humidity, temperature and windspeed up to seven days in arrears and forecasts up to seven days ahead. Obviously these are only as accurate as the guestimates made by all weather forecasts!


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Keeping Notes

Evernote is a superb app for keeping notes. It syncs with desktop clients on Mac or PC, and can be accessed via a website if you run a linux computer. You can save webpages, shoot photos, write notes on your iPhone or even record something. It’s a free service although a paid-for Pro version is also available.


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Playing Percussion

One day I thought it might be fun to play percussion along with a CD I was listening to. A few seconds surfing the App Store and I had Cowbell Plus installed and running. Accompanying the cowbell are a range of percussion instruments like egg shakers, tambourine, claves, sleigh bells and many more. It needs a very precise shake tempo if you’re shaking the iPhone but tapping it rhythmically is pretty easy.

Bonus! Number 11…

This one will save you enough money to pay for all the rest…

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Finding cheaper products

RedLaser is amazing! Fire it up and use the iPhone camera to scan the barcode on a product you’d like. It’ll go online, identify the product and then search for cheaper products.

I used it recently to save almost 50% on a book I wanted. Awesome!

So, those are ten eleven apps that I’ve found useful and never expected to use a mobile phone for. If you have an iPhone or iPod Touch what apps have you found which surprised you? Please feel free to post in the comments section so that we can discover more new stuff in 2010.

image1871492862.jpgSo Steve Jobs announced the new Apple iPad yesterday, essentially adding an iPod Touch XL to the product set.

As you may judge from the last sentence I’m a bit ambivalent at this stage. My friend Stewart put it well with his comment, “what’s it for?”

Reaction around the web seems very polarised into ‘I want one/I’m getting one’ and ‘I’m don’t like it/I don’t want one’.

The thing that I’ve noticed is that almost all the people I’ve read wanting haven’t stated what they’ll use it FOR. It doesn’t replace an iPhone (too big, not a phone) or a laptop (less connectivity, less disk space) so it needs to have a different function.

I think the most surprising ommission is the lack of stylus/drawing package. This could have revolutionised the artist world in a similar way to PageMaker back in the day.

At the moment, and admittedly without seeing or trying one, I’m in the ‘fail’ camp. I can’t see what it would replace in my pantheon of gadgets, or what it would add to the mix.

The real question is, will I have changed my opinion in 12 months time?

“OBJECTORS shouted “shame on you” as councillors gave the go-ahead to build a homeless hostel on a car park used by worshippers.”

I saw this on the local newspaper website today and it made my heart sink. Somewhat surprisingly it’s not a Christian church protesting. No, It’s a Shree Krishna Temple, a GNP Gurudwara Temple and a Polish Christian Church, as a temporary car park that they’ve been using for five years is to have a hostel for homeless people built on it by the Salvation Army.

There is a large car park 350 metres away from the one under discussion which is available for all these worshippers to use.

The depressing thing about this story is that faiths which advocate caring for one another are outraged enough at the movement of ‘their’ parking facility to join in unity against helping people who are worse off than them.

How different from another story five years ago.

Today I’m checking my motivation – am I doing things that are best for me at the expense of others?

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Saw this fab wrapping paper at Melbicks today. It’s not entirely suitable for MrsG-T’s birthday on Monday, but if anyone wants to wrap presents for me in it I’ll be very grateful…

My phone did that little vibrate that means an email has arrived.

As I’m almost pathologically incapable of leaving an email unread, I read it.

“Any chance I could use your white iBook photo on my blog please?”

Are you KIDDING?

As I noted here, I’m very much a learner when it comes to composing photographs but, with encouragement, am enjoying the process. I never for a moment thought that someone would ask to use one of them!

Anyway, if you go here you’ll see the photo in question. Below is the same white iBook in less arty guise. And if you live anywhere near Edinburgh you might want to attend the event in Stewart’s blog.

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If you have an iPhone or an iPod Touch and you don’t think the internal speaker is loud enough, but you can’t afford (or don’t want to buy) fancy external speakers, here’s a wee tip:

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Yes, that’s my iPhone in a whiskey tumbler. Please note that it’s smart to ensure there’s no liquid in the glass before carefully inserting your iPod/iPhone.

Different cups or glasses will give slightly different sounds so you can experiment to see which has the audio balance that you prefer. This tip won’t allow you to fill a nightclub with sound, but it makes the iPhone loud enough to hear over a boiling kettle:

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Have fun, but make sure there’s no liquid in the cup!

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And hopefully 52 photographs!

I have a few friends who are into photography and over the last year I’ve spent some time trying to develop (ha! did you see what I did there?) my awareness and skills with the help of Derek, Thomas, Emmsy, Stewart and Laura.

Thomas set up this website which encouraged us to post photographs of things that were ordinary but somehow special and I quite enjoyed the challenge.

Derek and Laura were especially encouraging with their comments and tips and so this year I’m going to try and take one decent photo each week and will post it in this gallery.

Keep an eye and if you see anything you like, or have constructive comments on how I could improve, please let me know.

From BloG-T

Just testing some photo sites today to see which one works well for my (hopefully) one photo each week. Photoshop.com is nice but not ideal for sending to WordPress, but Picasa seems pretty good.