Wednesday, May 18, 2011

The Week's Best iPad Apps [Video]

Casey Chan ?The Week's Best iPad Apps Planetary: Planetary is an iPad-only music player that renders your collection as a stunning universe of stars (artist), planets (albums), and moons (songs). Each successive level is fluidly interactive: tap on the name of a song to play it, give the display a gentle nudge to set the solar system spinning in motion, and expand with two fingers to zoom out back to album view. It's hard to explain the experience in words, but it's just one of those brilliantly designed apps that responds to your every touch just the way you think it should. Free.

The Week's Best iPad AppsAdobe Eazel for Photoshop: Adobe Eazel, Jesus' favorite iPad Photoshop app, works as a standalone paint application and also connects to Photoshop, sending images that get automagically scaled to whatever resolution you want. What's especially cool is the five finger interface and the mixing of wet and dry paint for color blending, with an engine that allows paint to dry over time, just like in real life. $5

The Week's Best iPad AppsNew Yorker: The first great iPad subscription: $6 a month or $60 a year. If you want the print and web version along with your iPad subscriptions, it's only 10 bucks more at $70 a year. Which is to say this is all a pretty damn good deal as each issue of writing literature excellence only costs a buck fifty. I'm signing up.

The Week's Best iPad AppsHitpad: HitPad is an app that explains the hot trending topics you never have any clue what's about. It uses some special formula to find out what's trending and then shows pretty columns relevant to that trend: News, Tweets, Videos, Web and Photos. The idea is that those bite sized but informative nuggets of info will let you know why a particular subject is trending. Free.

The Week's Best iPad AppsAdobe Color Lava for Photoshop: Color Lava allows you to mix colors in a natural way, like a real paint palette. From the mixes you can create individual color swatches and also color themes. This app works connected to Photoshop in real time, but also on its own. $3

The Week's Best iPad AppsAdobe Nav for Photoshop: Jesus says, it allows you to control Photoshop files and tools from the iPad. Using Nav you can create a custom palette with 16 of your favorite tools, as well as use it to pick colors or zoom. It will also allow you to navigate up to 200 documents already opened in Photoshop CS5, access their information, allowing you to reorder them to suit your workflow, and even zoom into the documents at will. Think about this last feature as a virtual light box for your current open documents. Nav will also allow you to open any document from your iPad on your desktop Photoshop instantaneously. $2

The Week's Best iPad AppsEveryday Looper: A simple app for recording a snatch of audio, looping it ad infinitum, recording another snatch on top of that, looping it ad infinitum, and so on. Just tap one of the four supplied tracks (or one of the six, on the iPad), and start making noise. Tap it again to stop recording and set the end point for the loop. From there you can record more, merge tracks together, set the volume of individual tracks, and so on. $6.

The Week's Best iPad AppsOn the Way to Woodstock: A detailed look at Woodstock, the artists who performed there, and the social climate in which the concert arrived. The experience is organized around a timeline of of the concert, with photos, videos, songs, and capsule biographies of musicians and groups supplied along the way. It's all a bit disorganized and overwhelming, but then so was the concert itself. $7

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/qSXNUK0kbcE/the-weeks-best-ipad-apps

rr phillies phillies bp oil spill grand canyon

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.