My family makes fun of me because my iPhone is literally an extension of my arms these days. And I make fun of myself about it too. However, I thought I’d talk a bit about WHY it’s an extension of me and WHY I love it just so much. I was a Blackberry user, but I’m firmly converted. I could never go back to the ol’ Crackberry. For me, the iPhone fits me much better.
My entire business life runs online. If I don’t have access to it, I am not able to work. Yes, I receive phone calls on the iPhone - that’s important. I get texts about work, occasionally, but more often than not it’s from a friend wanting to poke fun at me about something or to respond to something we’ve talked about previously. The phone is really the least important part of it to me, but it is necessary. If you hadn’t guessed, I would much rather write - or text something - than talk on the phone. The iPhone allows me to sneak around talking as much as possible.
Since training for the 10k began, I use the stopwatch feature on the phone constantly. We’re doing a run/walk training for the first few weeks, and that’s been indispensable. I can listen to music while timing myself. If I run on the track at the Y, I can use the lap feature to count how many (or how few) laps I’ve completed. Best of all, I’ve downloaded an app called “iMapMyRun” which can be used to map out a location (including things like calculating distance when you run around a cul-de-sac or the block), gives verbal directions, tells you what your pace is, and can berate you if you’re not meeting a goal or a pace you’ve set beforehand. It uses GPS to map exactly where you are and you can see graphically how fast you were running during specific parts of your run.
I constantly use Weight Watchers’ app as well. I can track my points directly from the phone, yes, but I can easily search foods by restaurants or style and get the points value before I even order off the menu. This enables me to go to a new place, scan the menu, do a few minutes of research and have a fairly accurate idea of what I’m eating and how much it’s gonna cost me (points-wise - money is a different story entirely).
I’m a movie freak, so I use the Fandango app. You can view showtimes and movie theaters, read reviews and rate your own experience, but best of all you can buy tickets with 2 touches of a fingertip. For a $1 convenience fee, I’ll gladly bypass the ridiculous lines at my nearby theater, blow into the theater and swipe my card to retrieve my pre-reserved tickets. Now if only they would let you pre-order Twizzlers and water . . .
QuickTip, for the mathmatically challenged, is fabulous. Since I usually give 20% in restaurants, I can figure out the tip by adding 10% plus 10% and generally not make too big of a mistake. It’s the pesky ADDING of the tip to the total that gets me every time (math major I am not). QuickTip has a slider that allows you to move the tip percentage around. You enter the amount of the check, slide to figure out what percentage you’re going to give, and voila - it adds that percentage to the total and tells you to the penny what you owe. It turns a #mathfail into a #mathwin.
CheapGas uses GPS to determine where I am, and gives me a list of all stations within a preset radius of my locations (I usually set it around 5 miles). I get a list of gas stations and their current prices for different octanes of gasoline, and lists the cheaper ones first.
It took awhile for the value of FourSquare to sink in. It’s merely a bigger and better version of BrightKite - basically a stalker’s tool to find out where your friends are and what they’re doing. FourSquare is private - meaning only people you allow can see your location - but it’s better than a simple GPS system. Those in Richmond can post their locations to their friends and add tips and suggestions that pop up when you check in at that same place, or near it. For example, I was at Short Pump Town Center yesterday and checked in on FourSquare. A couple of tips popped up, telling me to visit the Apple store for awesome customer service from a specific person. Another one suggested a menu item at a restaurant nearby. Yet another alerted me to a discount at a nearby sporting goods store. For the voyeur in me, I enjoy seeing where my friends are - I’ve been introduced to a few new places I’d never heard of.
The Flickr app lets me consolidate any pictures I take with my camera phone or on the fly into my main Flickr account. It also updates my Facebook photos and Twitter, if I want it to.
Tweetdeck is my choice for Twitter apps - I like being able to separate with columns the different things I watch for, like people tweeting from RVA or those using a the hashtag for #writeclubrva.
The Facebook app is much better than it used to be, but I still find it clunky and a bit buggy. Still, I check in with Facebook more through the iPhone than I do with my laptop.
Shazam is the most fun app because it puts an end to the annoying “What the heck is this song playing???” question. Hold it up to the source of the song and voila, it tells you artist, name of song, album, and links you to a place where you can download immediately.
Trapster is another new favorite of mine. Using GPS, you can quickly add a live police checkpoint, a traffic camera, or an accident. It blasts the information out immediately through text messaging to other users of Trapster with a specific location of the incident. Ironically, a friend of mine who is also a police officer told me about it. Now that more users are on Trapster, the results are much more accurate and reliable.
A friend turned me on to Beejive - I can’t tell if I hate it or love it. It pulls all of the IM programs from Facebook, GChat, Yahoo, AIM, et cetera ad nauseum into a single space on your iPhone. This means that at all times of day or night, anyone who sees you online can start a chat - directly to your cell phone. I’m not sure how I feel about it, but I know I’ll enjoy bothering random people while in waiting rooms.
Boxcar uses push notifications to let you know if you’ve been @ replied through Twitter or mentioned on Facebook and a variety of other programs. I find it highly annoying, but since I’ve been taking a break from Twitter, I’m getting notifications of @ replies a lot less frequently. You can turn off the random beeping and clanging sounds but I always leave them on so the rest of my family can be as annoyed by it as I am.
Now if I could just find an app that makes my kids quiet and well-behaved, I would hermetically seal the iPhone to my forehead for all eternity.
If you’re an iPhone convert, what kind of things do you like about it? Favorite apps?



I’m thinking you need to add this app to your iPhone. Definitely not available for the Crackberry.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-A3mYD6FcrE
Great post, btw - I linked to it on my own blog this afternoon.
Jonathan
For the practical stuff:
When I was living in Japan, the Kotoba! Japanese Dictionary and Lonely Planet phrasebook was indispensable.
Because we’re always making plans for travel, I use the Kayak app a lot when I am randomly thinking “hmm, I wonder how much it would cost to get as far away from here as possible? Not to mention a hotel and car there too.”
From all our time living in different countries, I also love my WunderRadio app, where I can listen to all my favorite radio stations from around the world live (if you have a radio app, check out Sydney’s fBI station, 94.5 fm).
The Whole Foods Recipe app has good recipes and will make you a shopping list or find recipes based on ingredients you already have on hand.
Because iPhone’s Y! weather app sucks balls, I use AccuWeather, which gives me everything from the latest doppler map to streaming weather video to whether or not today is a good day to fly a kite, catch the flu, experience arthritic pain, get a sinus headache… you name it.
Lastly, for fellow travelers reading this: MyConvert is awesome. It will convert everything from your usual currency, distance, weight blahblah to acid titration, angular velocity, international bra, sock/shoe, and blouse sizes and carbon 14 dating. It even has a short on screen ruler, which yes, I have had to use a couple times.
For entertainment:
I like word games so I have Word Fu (I like their sound effects), Scrabble (because beating a computer makes me feel thmart), and Word Warp. Other good brain games: Boxed In, Tangram Pro, Mahjongg Artifacts (although it crashed and lost my progress X( ), and now that we’ve just gotten back to the US I’m enjoying Urban Spoon and Fandango.
Nevan’s Favorites:
Jurassic Rollercoaster, Penguin Lite, Space Deadbeef, LOLCats, Lego Batman and Spongebob. Yeah, my four year old has his own Touch. If we didn’t buy it for him does it make it look less bad? It’s a little embarrassing when he says in public “MOMMY, WHERE’S MY iPHONE? IS IT IN YOUR PURSE? CAN I GET IT?”.
ugh. you know i already want an iphone and this post did not help that desire, it only made it worse. i now i really, really want an iphone! thanks, cristina for telling me what i’m missing out on. [removed]void(0);
these are the exact reasons I don’t have an iPhone. I would not get a thing done in my house or my life. I want one, but for the sake of my loved ones, I should not get one.
I love my iPhone too. I don’t really remember how I survived with out it. Here are a few of my faves:
Y!Finance - I am a dork when it comes to stock news and company news. It has been especially good these last couple of months
Pandora - Good music, what can I say
iMapMyRun - for many of the same reasons you listed. It is really convenient and is super easy to use for tracking pace, mileage and time
iWant / Yelp - great for when you are out and about to check out restaurants or stores close to you. Uses GPS to find locations. Super easy to use.
Sudoku / Sol Free / Word Warp / Unblock Me - these are my favorite fun games when I am lounging
TowerBloxx / TeachMeKindergarden / ShapeBuilder / Bouncedown / Tozzle - some of the kids favorite games
dude! i so hear you on the iphone being surgically attached to your palm. however, mine has been giving be troubles lately. i let it go too long without updating things and i actually have two phones (long story) and i constantly forget to plug in my other cell phone because i’m so attached to the iphone. ahhhh. but i do love the technologies and all the apps on the phone. it makes waiting at airports and in cars so much more bearable!
I *love* my iPhone SO MUCH but unfortunately I haven’t explored too many apps. Thanks for the great suggestions. I can’t wait to the try the iMapMyRun.