Erik Scholz    

Designing for Mobile

(via Techcrunch)

Clear – an iPhone to do app. You might ask: “again?”. But have a look at the teaser video. Seems very usable, shiny and uber nicely animated.

(via Mashable)

No more snooze. Or else the nifty app “Okite” will post some nasty tweets over your Twitter account every time you hit the snooze button. Examples for those messages: “Just as I thought, I want to become a stewardess” or “penis penis vagina vagina”.

(via Adverblog)

No more snooze. Or else the nifty app “Okite” will post some nasty tweets over your Twitter account every time you hit the snooze button. Examples for those messages: “Just as I thought, I want to become a stewardess” or “penis penis vagina vagina”.

(via Adverblog)

timosudmann:

nothing new – but a nice summary:Multiscreen Patterns Patterns to help understand and define strategies for the multiscreen world.
(via precious)

timosudmann:

nothing new – but a nice summary:
Multiscreen Patterns Patterns to help understand and define strategies for the multiscreen world.

(via precious)

There’s only few games that make sense on a touch device. Bumpy Road is one. Stunning look, fluffy animations and a haven’t-seen-before interface.

(via http://www.fastcodesign.com/1664013/bumpy-road-flips-touchscreen-game-mechanics-on-their-head)

Why Using iPhone Optimized Websites Over Native iPhone Apps

Today I was blown away by mobile Safari’s capabilities that I started showing around some examples of top-notch mobile websites. I received some “Nice. So?” and no “Wow, amazing, incredible!”. After that I felt to straighten up the facts about mobile web applications. Though most of these stunning mobile Safari capabilities are out there for years I never gave them any attention.

First of all I’d like to show some examples of mobile websites demonstrating features of cutting edge mobile web with a focus on mobile safari:

Truly these are mostly just gimmicks at first. But brought together intelligently we are talking about powerful elements to be combined into useful, funny, responsive and modern web apps.

The next question is why should this technology be used for any kind of application? We have native applications for the iPhone and we could wait for the missing flash plugin. But there’s couple of reasons to avoid these two.

Web Apps Pros

Web App Cons

As proven by companies like Facebook, Amazon or Google it’s cool to have an native App. But that’s expensive to develop and rather hard to spread through the jungle of digital devices. They all have a mobile website for their services. And these websites always have new features available quicker than any native app. And there’s loads of app store applications where I can just see no need because they don’t use features unique features like the mentioned camera.

To summarize web apps are sustainable, convenient, adaptable, profitable and most of all when there’s some good software designers even sexy.