![]() It's a good week for new iPhone camera apps: the schtick here is "an unlimited camer roll", uploading all your shots to maker StreamNation's servers, while ensuring you can always access your last 200 shots. Although of course, an HD version of the full album is also included. There's a remixing tool, a set of virtual loops to make your own music, and a 360-degree video. If you're new to Norwegian musician Bernhoft, this might be a good introduction: it's an app version of his new album Islanders that's as focused on getting you to play with the music as play it. It's for black and white shots only, with neat real-time previews, "constant light" instead of a flash, and a trend-bucking ban on front-facing camera shots. More photography: this is an uber-stylish camera app by photographer Kevin Abosch. That's still a big part of BeamIt though: a private messaging app to ping photos back and forth with text, with comments supported and also the option to send messages to people who don't have the app. The latest messaging app for iOS comes from a startup, Cooliris, that has traditionally focused on photo-sharing. A fun, intuitive tool to get you creating your own objects, not just printing other people's. This is the work of 3D printing firm MakerBot: an iPad app designed to work with its own MakerBot Replicator printers, creating everything from signs and rings to designs uploaded to the company's Thingiverse web community. It gets children to build colourful dinosaurs from their constituent body parts, then feed them and send them off exploring the scenery. The latest app hoping to capitalise is Dinosaur Mix, from inventive British developer Cowly Owl. Although a fair few teenagers may balk at the idea of their parents seeing an itemisation of their spending.ĭinosaurs: reliably brilliant for children, and indeed, for most adults too. It's essentially a prepay debit card, funded by parents, with the app used by both children and parents to keep tabs on balances and transactions. Osper is an interesting idea making its debut in the UK: a "money management system" for young people – i.e. Its app is a good way to discover new music, or simply to show off your own tastes. ![]() Subtitled "everyone's music playlist", Whyd is one of a clutch of music startups – see also Bop.fm, Songdrop and Tomahawk – trying to sit in between the various streaming music services, and provide a way to create and share playlists that work across them all. ![]() ![]() Moment has a new twist on the trend: it tracks how much you use your iPhone, with the aim of providing a polite intervention (of sorts) if you're spending too much time squinting at your screen, and not enough interacting with the real world and people around you. There are umpteen apps to help you quantify yourself, from activity to diet to fertility to stools. And if you're looking for Android apps instead, browse the archives of the weekly Best Android Apps roundups. We are excited for the reception of the international audience and remain committed to pushing the technological limits of game creation.Want more apps? Browse previous Best iPhone and iPad apps roundups on The Guardian. “Wartune: Hall of Heroes introduces a new experience that finally brings the scale of traditional PC-based strategy RPG gaming onto mobile. ![]() “At Hoolai Games, we have always been passionate about creating and developing quality, engaging games – no matter what platform it’s for,” said Xiang Lin, the vice president of international development at Hoolai Games. On mobile, Kabam also has published Kingdoms of Camelot: Battle for the North, The Hobbit: Kingdoms of Middle-earth, Blastron, Dragons of Atlantis: Heirs of the Dragon, and Fast & Furious 6: The Game. It is valued at $700 million, based on recent investments, and it is targeting revenues of $550 million in 2014, compared to $360 million in 2013. San Francisco-based Kabam is a leader in the free-to-play, hardcore social game business in the West. Hoolai has licensed its rights for iOS and Android to Kabam for North America and major European countries. The previously published Asian web title comes from China’s 7th Road, while the mobile version is a joint development venture from 7th Road and Hoolai Games. Wartune has been available for two years on the Web, including on. “We expect Wartune: Hall of Heroes to be as significant a hit internationally as it has been in China.” “Kabam is unique among the world’s mobile games companies in our ability to identify hit games in Asia that we adapt and make popular in Western markets,” said Kabam Publishing president Amit Ranade in a statement. ![]()
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