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Fat Jump Pro (By SID On)Developer: SID On Price: $0.99 Version Reviewed: 1.2 Download: here Requirements: Compatible with iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad.Requires iOS 4.0 or later. Located in the Warsow,Poland-SID on an independent mobile application developer has announced a recent update of Fat Jump Pro for the iPhone,iPad and iPod touch.Fat Jump Pro is a fast paced vertical arcade action for the iOS devices.Using the tilt controls the player must guide the jumping,little green hero (a healthy and crispy cucumber) up a never ending series of platforms... |
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Thursday, 8 December 2011
Schedule Planner Pro for iPhone and iPad
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The interfaces of either Schedule Planner Pro HD or Schedule Planner Pro make it simple to create categories of your own to add to the pre-programmed calendar and task categories (work, health, rest, and so forth), to assign colors to each category you create, and to set the time for each task or event in your calendar. The apps also enable you to easily keep track of how much time you spend on each item, whether or not it has been prescheduled. A very nice touch allows you to view, in overlaid pie charts, the time you’ve scheduled for each category to the time you’ve actually spent on each category.
Division of Labor: One nice feature in either Schedule Planner Pro or Schedule Planner Pro HD (pictured here) is its ability to show you how much time you’ve scheduled for tasks compared to how much time you actually spent on those tasks.
In addition to syncing with the other calendars, you can back up your Schedule Planner Pro calendar to Dropbox. Schedule Planner Pro and Schedule Planner Pro HD are separate apps, and must be purchased separately. Unfortunately, they also work independently of each other: You cannot sync directly between the iPhone and iPad versions. Other apps that work on multiple iOS devices—and often the Mac as well—are able to provide automatic syncing via Dropbox. (Day One, a journaling app I use frequently, alternating between versions on my iPad, iPod touch, and MacBook Pro, syncs via Dropbox in the background and without a hitch.)
While Schedule Planner Pro and Schedule Planner Pro HD have many drawbacks, they are nicely designed and work well; if you carry an iOS device with you most of the time, as many people do with the iPhone, syncing may not be much of a problem. The apps provide several ways to remind you of scheduled appointments and tasks. Via the settings panel, you can set a default reminder for each appointment (between 0 and 60 minutes before the scheduled start time). When you schedule each event individually—which is done in the day view rather than the monthly calendar view—you can also schedule an additional reminder for any time during that particular day.
Color Coordination: Both versions of Schedule Planner Pro enable you to easily add and delete categories
You can choose from among seven different sounds for your notifications (or you can choose no sound), and you can set them for your tasks’ start time and finish time. You can also set notifications for the actual start and finish times, rather than scheduled ones. It’s not clear how you are notified if you have turned sounds off.
The daily view provided by each app is especially nice. Two tabs are displayed at the top of the screen; tap one to view the day’s planned events and the other to view what you’ve actually accomplished. (In this view, you can also enter start and end times for either planned or unplanned items.) You can rearrange tasks in the day view, and you can also cut and paste both planned and completed tasks between different days.
You can also, in theory, sync with your Google or iOS Calendar in the daily view. But I could not get this feature to work; although I specified in the settings panel that I wanted to have schedule planner sync with my Google Calendar, whenever I tried to actually do so in the daily view, I got a an error message saying that I had not chosen a calendar to sync with.
Note that the Pro versions of Schedule Planner are paid offerings. Intersog also makes free Schedule Planner versions, one each for the iPhone and iPad. The free versions lack features like Calendar and Google Calendar integration, alerts and notifications, individual alarms, and other capabilities. Still, it’s a way to try out the app at no cost. (You can upgrade to the Pro version of either app via in-app purchase.)
The bugs and limitations mentioned above may prove to be considerable drawbacks for some users; for others, especially those not concerned with syncing, they are relatively minor. In any case, both apps are well-designed and offer simple and elegant interfaces that will probably be appealing to most users.
via : Macworld
This post was written by: Irfan Jam
Irfan Jam is a professional blogger, web designer and front end web developer. Follow him on Facebook
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