Calvetica - The fast calendar for iPhone. iPhone apps that can help in an emergency | iPhone Atlas. Take up to 800 pictures a minute with Fast Camera for iPhone. 800 photos a minute -- this an insane amount of photos and Fast Camera for iPhone accomplishes this without skipping a beat. Fast Camera is one of the more interesting apps I've come across lately. The second the app launches, it opens the camera and a little ticker starts rolling. There is no visual cue that photos are being taken except for this ticker, and I'll admit, I was a little confused. Once I realized what was happening, I tapped stop, then preview, and boom, there was 200 photos of my MacBook Air, in only about 15 seconds.
Then I thought out loud -- "holy crap. " After further investigation, it turns out that if you want photos to be taken at this rate, you must have it set to VGA quality, even from the rear camera. Fast Camera is normally $0.99, but for today only, it's free! [gallery link="file"] Corkulous Pro. Flipboard 1.8 adds cover stories to iPad. An update to the popular Flipboard introduces cover stories to the iPad version, something that's been available for the iPhone since its introduction in December. Cover stories culls a selection of interesting articles and photos, presenting them in a magazine-cover format for easy viewing. The iPad's cover stories is a combination of news and status updates. The update also adds a third page of tiles, the ability to identify preferred topics and international content guides with recommendations for readers in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Canada, Australia, France, Hong Kong and Taiwan.
Flipboard 1.8 is free and available via the App Store. [Via MacStories] Readability eliminates the fluff and lets you read: our chat with Rich Ziade. Readability is now in the iOS App Store, ready to change how you read the web. We were able to get a preview copy and have been playing with app for a few days. It's a universal app that lets you browse articles without the clutter of ads, superfluous links and redundant images. For those who use Readability in a third-party client like Tweetbot, you'll immediately feel at home when you first open the app. The idea behind Readability is similar to Instapaper and Read It Later, you browse the web on your desktop or mobile browser and send articles to Readability to read.
Using Readability to read is a pleasant experience for those who like to get to the meat of an article - the words. It's easy to add items to Readability and then read them on your iOS device. Overall, I enjoyed using Readability. Though I like Readability, the biggest question is whether I will keep using it. Answer: In a word - a lot! Question: Can you comment on how users access your service?