Youtuber QmekPrEaChEr7 (possibly not his real name) plays the solo from Megadeth’s Holy Wars on an iPod Touch with the PocketGuitar App.
Tag Archives: app
iPong
atCathal Furey writes:
I’m one of the co-founders of 45sound, a four-person start-up based just down the road from Google on Barrow Street, Dublin. Without boring you too much – we’re developed a service for easily fan-sourcing live music videos and making them sound great by automatically matching them with a proper live audio recording.
The band arrange the audio recording and promote the idea to their fans so we don’t have to be at any of the shows. It can scale around the world.
Anyhow we have one major competitor called Switchcam.com who are based
in Silicon Valley and got $1.2m in VC funding this week. They just organise fan videos that have already gone up onto YouTube, they don’t even make them sound right or do it with the band’s permission always.
Our website needs a bit of polish at the moment but our back-end technology is miles ahead. We’re releasing our iPhone app next month and would love to get some feedback. Thanks, Cathal.
Your thoughts…
AnTaoiseach @EndaKennyTD @simoncoveney @LCreighton @SimonHarrisTD and Dara Murphy launch App for FG Facebook #euref twitter.com/FineGaelToday/…
— Fine Gael Official (@FineGaelToday) May 2, 2012
When launching an ‘App’ we find an iPhone is a slightly more suitable prop than a laptop.
Journey Judge is an app that allows you to quickly and easily report an issue with public transport in Dublin. Bus never arrived? Dart late? Luas overcrowded? Tell Journey Judge and make your voice heard.
Thanks Nofun
No cash, favours, etc. were given for this post.
Chris Judge wrote and illustrated [kid’s book] The Lonely Beast and, last November, it won an Irish Book Award. Chris, his brother Simon and their friend James Kelleher, all from Dublin, then created a flash card app based on the book, for iPad and iPhone and iPod (Touch).
It’s a rather slick, funny, interactive app which helps kids learn their ABCs. There are loads of sounds, musical instruments, dancing robots, spinning bow ties and laughing monkeys involved. Ewok and Bodger Kids seem to LOVE it and giggle their socks off when they use it. It could well be the future of toddler learning.
No money, favours, etc, were given for this post

Of course it’s a T-shirt. Sheesh.
httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tqp5tRqXzsU
It’s not free.
You literally paid for it.
Damn you-know-whats.







