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Zagat to Go



The iPhone release of Zagat to Go ‘09 was an expensive bummer—a $10 app that depended on an Internet connection for its less than universally impressive restaurant and hotel listings—but Handmark has kept at it, adding the ability to search some of its listings while offline, an online-only reservation booker for some restaurants via OpenTable, and now an iPad-formatted browser. Now known solely as Zagat to Go, the app remains at its prior $10 price, but now uses the full iPad screen to display a map with simple locale details, or a more detailed screen with hours, dress code, features, accolates, and rating scores
Zagat to Go’s database remains extremely limited outside of major metro areas, and in some cases quite poor even within certain big cities, but at least the iPad app provides a better overall user experience than the original iPhone version did. We still prefer the listings of services such as Urbanspoon and Yelp, but those looking for the summarized and editorially vetted survey data of Zagat will find it pleasantly displayed here.

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many links of Applications

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Bing for iPad, Friended for Facebook + Tweetbot

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Death Rally, Luxor: Amun Rising HD, Streets of Rage 2 + You Don’t Know Jack

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: ABC Play, Monster Blaster, Scrabble for iPad + Words With Friends HD

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Great Little War Game, Rainbow Six Shadow Vanguard, Ring Blade + Tiger Woods 12

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Adobe Photoshop Express 2, PhotoPal, Shape-O ABC’s, Word Wagon + Zite

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Angry Birds Rio / HD, Liqua Pop + War Pinball HD

  • iPhone Gems: DoubleDragon + Fight Night Champion

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Can Knockdown 2, Infinity Field + Tiny Wings

  • iPad Gems: ABC Music, Three Little Pigs by Nosy Crow + VIZ Manga

  • iPad Gems: Dot 2 Dot Cosmic, Pirates vs. Ninjas vs. Zombies vs. Pandas + Ridge Racer Accelerated HD



  • iPad Gems: Dot 2 Dot Cosmic, Pirates vs. Ninjas vs. Zombies vs. Pandas + Ridge Racer Accelerated HD

  • iPhone Gems: The Beatles LOVE, Metal Slug Touch + Volcano Escape

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Crimsonworld, Dead Space, Magnetar: Space Fighter + Mayan Puzzle HD

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Jack and Joe, Paul Bunyan, Three Little Pigs, Thumbelina, TiVo + Tron: Legacy

  • iPhone Gems: Battlefield 2: Bad Company, Burn the Rope, GeoSpin, Spirits + The Wrong Side of the Bed

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Curious George, Gossie + Friends, Grimm’s Rapunzel 3D & Pocket God: Uranus

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Asphalt 6, Hook Worlds, Red Nova, TurboGrafx GameBox + Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: ABC Go, Bloki, Bugsy The Blue Hamster + iKnow Cats HD

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Dungeon Hunter 2 + Eternal Legacy

  • iPhone Gems: N.O.V.A. 2, Real Racing 2 + Shadow Guardian

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Backbreaker 2, Cut the Rope: Holiday Gift, Dead Rising Mobile, Jenga HD + WINtA

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Lady Gaga Revenge 2 + Rock Band Reloaded / HD


  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Downhill Bowling 2, Handy Manny, Mensa Brain Test, Zoo Rescue + More

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Edge, NBA Elite, NFS Hot Pursuit, Space Miner Blast, Star Wars Arcade + Wispin

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Astronut, Gunstar Heroes, Mushihimesama Bug Panic, Rage HD, Splatterhouse + More

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Instagram, Path, Hipstamatic, Pocketbooth + More

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Jeopardy, Wheel of Fortune, Press Your Luck, Family Feud + More

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Beast Boxing 3D, Capcom Arcade, Hansel + Gretel CISHD, and Skyfire 2.0

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Age of Zombies, Circuloid + iSlash

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Angry Birds Halloween, Carcassonne, EA MMA, Reckless Racing + Samurai II

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Ambiance, CineXPlayer, Lose It!, Old MacDonald Piano, UpNext 3D Cities + More

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: AR.Drone Apps AR.PowerFlight, DroneControl, Flight Record, MatrixFlightHD + More

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Arkanoid, FIFA 11, Fishing Kings, Spider-Man Total Mayhem, Star Battalion + More

  • iPhone + iPad Gems: Warpgate, Virtual City, Surviving High School, The Sims 3 Ambitions, SimCity Deluxe, Civilization Revolution
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    TweetDeck for iPad




    We’re fans of the computer version of TweetDeck, which provides quick, multi-column, and multi-account access to Twitter timelines, mentions, and direct messages; even the stripped-down iPhone and iPod touch version contained some neat interface tricks. Now there’s an iPad one called TweetDeck for iPad (Free) that includes most of the original’s tricks, once again at no charge to the user.

    Though its UI is once again a little different, this time calling up a notepad and big on-screen keyboard as overlays on top of its Twitter columns, it provides a lot of control over the columns you see, lets you flick to scroll through columns stored off-screen, and includes tools to let you share photos, compress URLs, and geotag your tweets. Until Twitter releases its official application for the iPad, which will apparently be based on the Tweetie applications for Mac and iPhone, we’ll likely be using this app—if TweetDeck continues to evolve, who knows, it may even wind up being the best on this platform.

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    Recorder HD




    If it wasn’t for the iPad’s lack of Apple’s Voice Memos application, the very idea of a mediocre, iPhone UI-based recording application that fills the screen with “HD” blackness would be offensive. But that’s what Decipher Media’s Recorder HD ($1) offers for a buck: it just drops an iPhone UI-based recorder in the center of the screen, storing a list of .CAF format files that can be e-mailed and played back with QuickTime. Editing? Nope. Quality settings? Nope. It’s a step back from what Apple has given away for free with iPhones and iPods for a couple of years now. Buy it only if you’re desperate.

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    NPR for iPad

    Apart from the arguably necessary ads, which include screen-filling images and speaker-absorbing audio, it’s easy to be impressed with NPR for iPad (Free), the official application of National Public Radio. NPR provides three scrolling streams of content: “news,” “arts & life,” and “music,” the latter one with a guaranteed mix of audio and text content, and the former two with text and possibly audio as well. Click on any speaker icon and you can listen to the network’s professionally developed and almost invariably smart combinations of narrative and music; select a story and you get a scrollable, readable text article with a photograph and sharing links out to Twitter, Facebook, and e-mail.
    You can also build saved playlists of audio you want to hear—including on-demand content from individual NPR programs and live stations—which continue to play for as long as you’re within the application, which could easily be hours given that the app also includes a topics browser that includes access to numerous other articles that aren’t featured on the main page. Apart from video, which is absent in the NPR app, there’s a ton to read, see, and hear here; it’s a highly compelling app that lacks only for the big main page, search feature, broader archives, and podcast content of the NPR web page.

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    NewsRack




    We loved Newsstand for the iPhone, and though it recently changed names to become NewsRack ($5), this universal iPhone/iPod/iPad application remains our favorite RSS newsreader for the iPad. As before, it saves a list of RSS feeds you create, or synchronizes them from Google Reader, enabling you to maintain one big list of read and unread articles across multiple devices. The browsing interface is very simple: NewsRack splits the screen into an articles pane and a display pane, enabling you to see article summaries before clicking an arrow button to load the full original web page in a very usable crop of the Safari browser, and providing the ability to look at articles from all of your sources at once, or just an individual site that interests you. There’s nothing sexy in NewsRack—even its prior widescreen cover view is completely gone, unfortunately—but it works so well that we now rely upon it every day. Hooks for Twittering and Facebooking the stories you like are much appreciated, but it would be great if NewsRack could store content on its own without relying upon the use of a separate app or

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    iZen Garden for iPad





    It pains us to say it, but iZen Garden for iPad ($6) feels like a big disappointment. We previously loved the original iPhone version, which enables users to select stones, plants, and other objects to arrange into a simple, rake-ready Japanese zen garden, but developer Random Ideas’ “sequel” was a bit of a cash-in, and now there’s a less intuitive iPad version. Objects and fonts that worked pretty well on the iPhone and iPod touch now look fuzzy on the iPad’s higher-resolution display, and trying to do simple rescaling and moving gestures sometimes seemed to move things into places where we didn’t want them. Eventually, we got the hang of placing objects, rotating them, and scaling them, but not before going through a couple of frustrating, decidedly un-zen sessions of trial and error. The audio here is still fantastically relaxing, but this app really would benefit from a price cut, a rethinking of the user interface, and improved graphics.

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    Hurricane HD



    As an iPad-only application, Hurricane HD ($4) is the sort of software we can’t quite understand paying for: a big hurricane map with a blog-like collection of “News” postings, information on past storms, and animated satellite photographs of storm activity for the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian Oceans. While we suppose that meteorologists or students might enjoy looking up old tracking data for past storms, with nice enough map overlays that zoom in to show you wind speeds and pressure, the average user can get most of the data he or she needs for free from Weather.com, news networks, or the NOAA web site. This is a fine aggregator, but niche at best in appeal

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    Epicurious Recipes & Shopping List



    If there’s any single eye-candy application for the iPad that could sell the device to amateur, part-time, and possibly even professional chefs, it’s Epicurious Recipes & Shopping List (Free), an update to the Epicurious iPhone application. Unlike so many other developers, Conde Nast makes outstanding use of the iPad’s screen, dividing the landscape display into a left bar with useful “featured” collections of recipes in buttons, with search and saved favorites above them, and a shopping list button below, then uses the majority of the screen to display tabbed folder-like lists of recipes that can be sorted by relevance, photos, user ratings, date, or alphabetical order. The photos are commonly gorgeous, recipes presented with perfect clarity as lists with separate directions, and an e-mail export option formats everything to send to friends or different devices. Epicurious is bound to become a fixture on every iPad that will spend time in a kitchen, and guarantees a role for Apple’s tablets outside the living room, bedroom, and office

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    eBay for iPad




    The question of whether or not web-based businesses need to release iPad-optimized applications becomes murkier with the release of eBay for iPad (Free), an application distinct from the company’s earlier iPhone clients. eBay turns the screen into a heavily photographic listing browser, letting you search the site’s auctions with a pill-shaped search box, then refining results by category, price, and advanced criteria; in a neat touch, a yellow 2009-vintage iPhone/iPod touch slider lets you constrain prices for the listings by just pulling left and right to set minimum and maximum dollar amounts. There’s also a My eBay pulldown, allowing you to view tracked items, and of course, you can bid on items from the application. At least, some of them.

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    Easy Agenda


    If Apple’s Notes application struck you as being too underpowered, you might be amused by 2Boxes Studio’s Easy Agenda ($3), an iPad-only app that tries to move the concept forward, and half-succeeds. Three different tools let you prepare calendar-like lists of events, typewritten notes, and finger-drawn sketches, then send e-mails containing each type of content. The sketches are fairly primitive, using a single-width, marker-thick line rather than smooth curves or thinner pen/pencil-like drawing, but they’re there. And that’s pretty much it; none of the features feels especially well-thought out, and the interface is non-intuitive, but it’s a start

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    Delivery Status Touch



    Junecloud’s $2 Delivery Status Touch was the best package-tracking program we tested for the iPhone; now the company has released a universal iPad/iPhone/iPod touch version under the same Delivery Status Touch name for $5. The higher price tag is a bummer, but the upgrade is free for prior users, and adds a very nice iPad interface, dividing the landscape screen into a list of scheduled deliveries, a map, and a pane for tracking details; portrait mode turns the list of deliveries into a popover window.

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    Bowls HD

    The original release of Bowls for the iPhone was only half-fulfilling, providing two-at-a-time access to images of Tibetan Singing Bowls that can be touched and rubbed to make hauntingly beautiful sound effects. Good news: Oceanhouse Media’s new Bowls HD - Authentic Tibetan Singing Bowls ($4) fixes that problem, providing a single, static screen with 13 different instruments at once, but it needlessly doubles the price of the first app and sells it separately, despite adding little more to the experience than reusing the same art and sounds. Consequentially, you wind up staring at a flat drawing that only becomes a little more interesting when you rub the bowls, which glow to indicate that they’re being touched; the sound is, again, the big draw here. We love the concept, and the gentle humming of the bowls is relaxing, but this really should have been a universal app at the prior price.

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    BoardBox



    We like the idea behind Chillingo’s BoardBox ($4)—play chess, checkers, reversi, go, xiangqi, tic-tac-toe and other board games on an attractively-rendered board with nice-looking pieces—but the game’s nearly non-existent artificial intelligence spoils what could otherwise be an awesome collection of titles under one app’s roof. Instead of providing both a single- and double-player experience, BoardBox sets up its boards for two people to play against one another, then does little but keep score and automate the removal of pieces where appropriate.
    Need help with the rules? It pulls up Wikipedia entries; it also offers a collection of different variations on chess rules, go, xiangqi and checkers, for those who want to try something different, and saves games in progress for those who want to switch boards and then return. With full competitive AI, BoardBox would be easy to love; as-is, it’s only as good as the person you find to play against.

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    AIM 4 iPad

    The single biggest positive of AOL’s AIM for iPad (Free) is right there between the parentheses: there’s no charge for this instant messaging program, which supports multiple AIM, MobileMe and .Mac accounts, and expands upon the previously-released iPhone version with custom wallpapers, a three-pane landscape mode with separate columns for your buddy list, active IM sessions, and one current discussion.
    Additionally, AIM flips the entire screen to show you your “Lifestream,” including Facebook and Twitter updates from your friends, Digg and Flickr content, and more. But like all instant messaging programs, AIM is forced by iPhone OS 3.2 to hog the entire screen, relying on push notifications when it’s not otherwise filling your display with largely empty or not useful columns. It doesn’t help that AIM—now in its second release for the iPad—is still buggy, sometimes continuing to feed you notifications even after you’ve closed it. Until and unless Apple reveals a better form of multitasking for the iPad, IM solutions such as this should consider integrating Apple’s Safari browser in the background; the idea of filling a complete computer screen with nothing but IM content is just not compelling.

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