iPhone price range shows carrier’s costs – SlashGear

Analyst Horace Dedlo of asymco has published a report that takes the newest selection of iPhones, ranging from the iPhone 3GS locked (for free) all the way up to the iPhone 4S 64GB unlocked (for $849) and suggests that this is the first time Apple has offered a real portfolio of choices for consumers. Along with this, he places the prices for unlocked variants on top of a chart for locked variants of the iPhone, showing quite clearly that not only is there a simple nearly-singular price difference between the locked and unlocked versions of each of the different iPhone models. furthermore, there’s a direct correlation between the ASP (average selling price) of the iPhone from just this past quarter and the current price portfolio Apple has for the iPhone now.

What you can see in the chart here in this post is that the 3GS is at the top of this chart with a completely free price point on-contract (locked) and $375 for its unlocked model. At the bottom is the iPhone 4S 64GB with a $399 price point ON contract and an unlocked price point of $849. Very very close to the middle of the unlocked prices here is Apple’s published ASP for the iPhone in quarter 2 (the last reported quarter at the moment) of 2011. What does this tell us? it means that we can assume that the mode equals the mean and the median in the distribution of sales here. it also tells us that the ASP has likely not changed between here and there for Apple on iPhones.

You’ll notice that at the same time Apple offered their first free iPhone in the new 3GS pricing model, they also added the 64GB option for the 4S, thus perhaps making up for the lowering price by adding more high-end sales profit. Sound alright?

The other thing to be noticing here is the amount of white space which indicates the difference between the unlocked and locked models. it shows that right around $450 you’ll be bumping up to an unlocked model, this of course not taking into account the 3GS which will cost you no more than $375 no matter what. Dedlo suggests that because the unlocked price is also the price that Apple sells its products direct to its customers, and that many countries do not have operators who’ve made deals with Apple the way the top three in the USA have, that the unlocked price must be very near what the operators pay, regardless of their location, to have the device in their stores.

Sound like a lot of cash to you? Mobile money rolls!

iPhone 5 Release Nearing: Top 6 Expected Features That it Will Not Have

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Flash Support:

With the iPhone becoming more powerful, hardware has become less of an issue. Apple turned against Adobe Flash, calling it power-hungry and prone to crashing.

4G:

4G offers high download and upload speed compared to 3G applications. 4G network allows roaming wireless in local areas and high data rates with 100 Mbit/s wireless service. It also offers the ability to utilize high definition video and the video conferencing features of mobile devices attached to a 4G network. the iPhone 5 is not 4G supportive, as LTE chip price will not match Apple’s cost effective strategies and it may be difficult for the company to maintain the slimness in iPhone.

Loud Speakers:

Apple can make slim iPhones by using condensed memory, smaller processors and powerful batteries, but speakers will ruin the miniaturization. Speakers move air and create sound, so bigger speakers are always effective. the speaker on the iPhone 4 is one of the weakest, worst performers of any self-respecting smartphone. Apple focuses more on the design, so the company would rather sacrifice the functionality of the speaker.

Email:

The email system in iPhone is too simple and there is no way to delete the emails except for one by one. if you want to send an email as ‘priority’ this is not possible.

Thunderbolt Port:

Thunderbolt Port makes the data flow and connectivity lightening fast. the iPad 3 and iPhone 5 is expected to support Thunderbolt port, but the iPhone 5 will not support the port, reducing the possibility of a fast data transfer between the smartphone and iOS devices.

Keyboard:

Though the keyboard in iPhone gets the job done it is not perfect. the Blackberry Storm series of phones from RIM has a better keyboard. In vertical mode, RIM has an ingenious “reduced-set” keyboard that was only five keys across and four keys tall. Apple is unlikely to adopt a new keyboard system.

iPhone 4S case roundup

We may not have the iPhone 5 yet, but the iPhone 4S is here, packing an improved camera, a faster processor and intelligent voice control. If you’re going to splash your cash on one of these — or on an iPhone 4 (they’re the same size and shape) — you’re going to want a good case to go with it.

We’ve done the legwork for you and pulled together 10 great cases to go with your shiny new handset.

Kenzo leather case

The Kenzo Leather Tokyo Pouch wraps your new phone in fashionable cow-skin. There may be room for a platinum credit card or two as well.

Shine case 2

If you’re going to be carrying a new iPhone, you’d better look the part. Thankfully, the Shine Case II packs a mirror inside so you can sort that stupid haircut out.

BeachBuoy waterproof case

The BeachBuoy Waterproof Case can remain watertight at depths of up to 5 metres, so dropping it in your pint no longer needs to be a worry. we don’t know what’s ‘new and improved’ about it though — maybe it’s got a longer cord or something.

Maya 2

The Maya II Pouch isn’t made from real leather so will suit those of you who adore cows and their big, brown eyes as we do. It’s a simple case and will probably look good in a motorbiker’s pocket.

keyboard case

We won’t insult your intelligence by telling you what the iPhone 4 battery charger case with slideout Qwerty keyboard does. ok, fine — it charges your phone via an internal battery and it has a slide-out keyboard. Happy now?

Penguin case

The search for the best iPhone case is over. The Case-mate Creatures Waddler is a penguin. we love penguins, their waddles remind us of the CNET UK team after a night on the tiles. We’re not sure what case could beat this one. perhaps…

CNET UK case

Oh yes, it’s a CNET UK iPhone 4 case. Celebrate your love of all things tech with this unbelievably stylish — and functional — case from LikeMyCase. ok, so it’s not actually our case, you can upload your own image if you like. Maybe head on over to our Facebook page and choose a picture from there.

Griffin Survivor case

The Griffin Survivor case wraps your iPhone 4S in enough rubber to protect it from six-foot drops. We’d love to see it get tested to the extreme — probably involving a tank — just so long as it wasn’t our phone trapped inside.

Twelve South Book case

If your first thought to that picture is, “I don’t want no stinkin’ books, CNET UK, give me more tech!” don’t worry, there’s an iPhone trapped inside it. The BookBook is a great case for convincing everyone on the bus that you’re kind of a big deal.

Angry Birds case

Did you really think we’d do an iPhone-themed round-up and not include something about our favourite irritated avians? you can get the red, black and yellow Angry Birds or even side with the enemy and get the green pig. We’d love to suggest that you and your friends buy one of each and throw them at each other in a real-life game, but legally we’re not allowed to recommend it. Sorry.

Hands-On Video Reviews Of Siri On iPhone 4S Reveals It Also Has a Sense Of Humor – iPhone Hacks

One of the major features of Apple’s new iPhone 4S is the intelligent personal assistant feature called Siri.

You may have already seen the exhaustive list of phrases that it can understand, but if you’re not impressed, checkout this hands-on video reviews of Siri on the new iPhone 4S, discovered by folks at iPhoneTicker.de.

It looks like Siri also has some sense of humor. The reviewer asks Siri some personal questions such as:

Reviewer: I love you.

Siri: I hope you don’t say that to other mobile phones.

Stuff.tv have also published another demo video of Siri that was taken last week at Apple’s Let’s Talk iPhone event:

In our opinion, Siri has the potential to become as revolutionary as iPhone’s multi-touch feature.

Let us know what you think in the comment.

Apps: Five Siri alternatives that give your older iPhone a voice

After last week’s iPhone 4S unveiling, Siri was one of the most talked-about features. With Siri, the iPhone 4S will be able to answer just about anything you ask it, from the weather report to nearby points of interest. It can also read messages and notifications aloud and even let you dictate messages of your own instead of relying on the phone’s on-screen keyboard.

There’s only one drawback to Siri: unless you’re planning on upgrading to the iPhone 4S, the feature is out of your reach. and Siri Assistant—the app on which Siri is based (and which Apple acquired last year)—has already disappeared from the App Store; the app will stop working on October 15, so even existing Siri Assistant users face a potentially silent future.

Not to worry, though, iPhone 4 and 3GS owners—you needn’t miss out on the voice-control fun. The App Store continues to offer many apps that provide a lot of the same features iPhone 4S owners will get with Siri—and those third-party apps are available for free in many cases. Here are a few worth checking out.

Dragon Go

Nuance’s Dragon Go app underwent an update last month to deliver a much improved voice service to users. The free app works on all iPhones and third- or fourth-generation iPod touches (if you use an external microphone). It’s simple to use—just say what it is you’re looking for, and Dragon Go will search hundreds of content providers to deliver the best answers to match the query. for instance, for those wanting to listen to songs by a certain artist, Dragon Go will find that artist on Pandora, Last.fm and Spotify (for premium users of that music service). It can also help call a taxi, look up good restaurants nearby, and stream movies.

Google Search

Voice recognition plays a prominent role in Google’s mobile search tool. Instead of typing in a Google search query, Google Search allows voice commands to conduct a search. The app also exploits your phone’s proximity sensor; just raise the phone to an ear and talk to run a search. In addition to straightforward searches, the app also uses location to help find movie times, local restaurants, and more.

Vlingo

Vlingo is a great multitasker. By using voice commands, users can dictate an email, text message, tweet or Facebook status, make a call, locate a place, or search the web. When spoken to, the app sends the voice command to Vlingo’s servers, returning the answer in text form. to use Vlingo, simply say one of four commands before the request: find, search, social update or call. The free app provides basic search functionality; for $10, you can add email and text message dictation.

Voice Camera Pro

Unlike the apps above, Voice Camera Pro is designed to help specifically with one native iPhone app: the built-in camera. Instead of tapping around the normal camera app, Voice Camera Pro uses fairly obvious voice commands to launch the app’s camera, take a picture, view your photo library, and share photos. It also adds a few fun extras, such as snapping up to four photos consecutively. In loud conditions, you may need to use an external microphone (such as the headphone, mic, and remote pair your iPhone ships with) to clearly convey your command, but it’s worth a try for $2.

Voice Control

Don’t forget—your iPhone 4 or 3GS already comes with some voice-recognition functionality (as does the third- and fourth-generation iPod touch). The native Voice Control feature should really be given a little more credit—it’s not only good for calling people hands-free, but can also FaceTime contacts (on the iPhone 4) and control your music. Voice Control can additionally list artist names, shuffle playlists, skip tracks, or play music similar to the current song playing. for many users, Voice Control—accessed most easily by holding down the Home button on your device—is quite suitable for their needs.

For winter’s storms, a stay bag

For those without power after Hurricane Irene, the sound of a neighbor’s generator was a loud, grating reminder that some people were actually ready for the storm.

My family fared well enough during our weeklong outage, although we could have used some anti-anxiety medication. but the chug of my neighbor’s generator still nags at me because it’s a reminder of how poorly prepared I am for an extended outage this winter.

To remedy that problem, I turned to three experts in disaster planning: Arthur T. Bradley, author of “The Handbook to Practical Disaster Preparedness for the Family”; Ed Charlebois, vice president at Travelers Insurance; and Richard Serino, deputy administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

Their advice: with a handful of key items and a fresh look at some familiar household objects, you can endure a few snowbound days without power — even if you don’t have $600 or $1,000 for a generator.

The obvious priority during a winter outage is keeping warm, since most heating systems won’t work. People with fireplaces and wood-burning stoves will do fine, of course, but everyone else needs a backup plan.

Like a kerosene heater. or not.

My family had one when I was young, but if anyone bumped into it and triggered its sensitive emergency shut-off mechanism, we would spend a half-hour battling the stench of kerosene fumes by opening doors and windows to the freezing wind. (

Bradley, a NASA engineer, said he much prefers propane-fueled indoor heaters, like the Mr. Heater Portable Buddy (around $75). as with any heater, users must leave a window slightly open for ventilation, and read the manual closely. but this heater can warm a medium-size room nicely for hours on a small propane cylinder, and when I bumped it slightly, it shut off without a stink.

In winter the heat not only keeps people warm; it keeps pipes from freezing and bursting. the good news here is that well-insulated homes with even a modest heat source can usually survive at least a day or two in sub-freezing temperatures without risk to indoor pipes, Bradley said. If you leave the faucets trickling, that will also help.

But not all pipes are created equal. the ones running from the basement to the kitchen often skirt an outside wall, and if neither wall nor pipes are insulated, you could be at risk. So take five minutes and wrap those pipes with insulation tape (Frost King, about $11 for 15 feet).

After heat comes light.

People with fireplaces can generate heat and light simultaneously, but everyone else should consider tossing their old conventional flashlights and buying LED lamps, which use the same batteries but last far longer for the same amount of light.

Ideally, you’ll have three types: a lantern for communal gatherings (eGear’s 10-Day Lantern is around $35), flashlights for general use (Energizer Industrial 2-LED, $9.50) and headlamps (Brinkmann 3-LED, two for $11) for reading and maintenance tasks.

A fourth light was suggested by a camping-store employee. “My friends had a bunch of solar-powered lights in their yard,” she said. “They’d just pull them inside at night and put them out again in the morning to charge.” (Hampton Bay’s Solar LED Walk Lights are about $3 apiece.)

But in the quest for light, beware of candles. “You wouldn’t believe the number of fires that happen where people leave candles unattended,” Charlebois said.

Next, food. for this, head to a camping store, which makes sense because living through a power outage is just like camping, only slightly more miserable.

In a blizzard you won’t have access to the grill, so pick up a propane camping stove (Optimus Crux Lite, $40). in a ventilated room, use it to boil water for some of the surprisingly tasty mix-and-serve meals campers live on (like AlpineAire Mountain Chili for two, $8). Use disposable tableware (50 Dixie plates, $4; 48 plastic utensils, $1) and, to light the stove, waterproof matches (Coghlan’s, $2 for 160 matches). for music to dine by and news, get a battery-powered radio (Radio Shack pocket radio, $15).

Preserving your food and beverages in a snowbank is a questionable strategy, unless your strategy somehow involves extremely fat raccoons. A good alternative, Serino said, is to use the fridge.

Here’s how. Keep your empty water jugs and, a few days before the storm, fill them with water, leaving an inch of space at the top. Turn the refrigerator and freezer temperatures to their lowest settings, freeze as many jugs as possible and pack your freezer and refrigerator with them.

“That’ll keep everything colder longer,” Serino said. “That can make a difference, especially if you’re keeping medication in there.”

Or, perhaps, alcohol.

Another benefit of the ice-block approach is that you can drink the water after it melts, although you may want to sprinkle it with lemonade powder to disguise the stale taste.

Or, perhaps, alcohol.

The impulse to drink heavily may be strongest if you are one of the forlorn 15 percent of Americans who rely not on public water supplies but on well water and electric pumps. That would include me, and for us unfortunates an outage means no water for food, showers or toilets. You see my point.

My wife, brilliantly, filled our bathtub with water so we could flush the toilets and wash a bit. but the morning after the storm we woke to a nearly drained tub — the result of a leaky plug.

Advance testing would have helped, but a better option is the AquaPodKit ($25), a bathtub-size bladder with a siphon. the bladder won’t leak, and you can use the water for drinking, not just flushing and cleaning.

Luckily, we had recently replaced an old toilet with a low-flush unit. we then closed off our other bathrooms to conserve water. my wife and I both have jobs that depend on the Internet. I managed to connect through a Verizon iPhone, which can transmit a wireless Internet signal to nearby devices. (Similar services are available from all major cellular networks.)

But without chargers, I had to save power by severing all network connections I wasn’t actively using, and keeping screens extremely dim.

As Irene approached, some smart people bought power inverters, which convert electricity from your car into 120-volt AC power, complete with a three-pronged outlet. Buy one (Schumacher’s 140-watt model, about $20) and then, in the next outage, you can plug it into your car’s accessory port and while away the hours with a laptop and the car stereo. the car should be running and, of course, fully out of the garage.

Streets can be impassable in a storm, so if you want to use your car as a de facto generator, stock up on gas (Scepter 2.5-gallon canister, $10.50). Bradley said the National fire Protection Association recommends that homeowners store no more than 25 gallons, and some cities impose their own limits.

Keep the car’s gas tank at least half full as the storm approaches, Serino added, and have extra cash on hand. without power, retailers cannot check credit card data.

Finally, Serino said, gather your storm supplies and put them in an old backpack.

“That way, you’re not running all over the place looking for things when the power’s out,” he said.

Toss in a pair of earplugs, too. They’ll come in handy when your neighbor’s generator kicks on.

GhostGuitar app for iPhone, iPad now live

Yonac, a mobile application developer, has developed a new GhostGuitar app that allows users to play air guitar, which means that you can create guitar tunes without really holding a physical guitar.

This has been made possible with augmented reality. the GhostGuitar app works with iOS 4.2 running devices that have a front facing camera such as iPhone 4, iPad 2 and iPod Touch (fourth generation). Amongst several other guitar apps, the GhostGuitar app promises the real air guitar fun.

The app detects user’s hand movement, for instance right hand, performs the gesture of strumming the strings and left hand fingers manipulating the fret board, to create music.

User can also perform picking individual strings on the air guitar simulated on the device’s screen. for starters, users get to choose the type of guitars to play along with chord progressions and use effect pedals.

Once the user gets hang of air guitar and effects, the ‘Ghost Band’ practice will give almost real jam session experience. the app supports 44.1 kHz quality audio and offers touch-free air guitar in true sense.

GhostGuitar can be slotted as one of the fun apps for the iOS devices that involve the user physically and give more real-like experience of air guitar. We can expect couple of applications like this for iOS devices and the platform can give some competition to the Kinect for Xbox 360.

iPhone 5 on Oct. 4? Smartphone War to Heat up with AT&T Samsung Galaxy S2 Coming on Oct. 2

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Given the emergence of Samsung Galaxy S2 on different carriers it will be interesting to see what Apple has to offer when iPhone 5 is released.

Both these devices from Apple and Samsung are capable of setting their own individual benchmarks, and hence a vicious battle is on the cards. just as Apple fans are hoping for Apple to deliver yet another surprise, Android users surely will hope for Samsung Galaxy S2 to offer a stiff fight against iPhone 5.

With advancement of technologies, there is no end for product innovation and each smartphone vendor wants to ensure they have the device that can be the dominant player in the smartphone market.

The AT&T’s model of Galaxy S2, which will feature the thinnest dual core smartphone in the American market, has been appreciated by the whole world. it had even overtaken iPhone 4 in UK market.

AT&T’s chief rival Verizon will have a similar portfolio of products including iPhone 5 and Motorola Droid Bionic. Sprint and T-Mobile are also hoping to get their piece from the Apple pie.

The Samsung Galaxy S2 on AT&T will be priced at $199 with a new two-year contract, according to AT&T Facebook page which also mentioned that the phone will be available both online and in retail stores on the launch date. With 5 million units sold around the world in 85 days after its launch Samsung’s phone claims to be the fastest selling handset around.

Here is a look at how Samsung Galaxy S2 can give a stiff competition to iPhone 5.

Display: Samsung Galaxy S2 sports the Super AMOLED Plus 4.3-inch display which is the best available technology for mobile displays. Samsung is the only manufacturer of Super AMOLED Plus displays and if one wants to experience the best screen there is no other choice in the market as the conventional RGB matrix makes the display sharper as well, helping you to read the smallest of text. The Real-Stripe panel technology brings 30 percent more pixels per inch for a brighter, clearer and richer viewing experience compared with the first-generation AMOLED.

The iPhone 5 is expected to feature a 3.7-inch or 4-inch display. With major smartphones releasing a 4.3-inch display, it will be interesting to see what iPhone 5 will offer. Galaxy S2 clearly dwarfs the iPhone 5 in terms of display and technology.

Design: as Samsung was sued by Apple for copying its design, clearly the design of Samsung phone cannot be disputed. Samsung has offered one of the finest products in the thinnest form.

Apple products are known for their beautiful design. The iPhone 5 is expected to adopt a teardrop design that is supposed to be slimmer and lighter than previous iPhone models. The iPhone 5 is expected to come with Apple iPad 2’s design as rumors suggest that a more uniform design across Apple’s entire mobile platform is imminent. and Apple is expected to bring not just iPhone 5 but another model known as “iPhone 4S” spotted by various case leaks.

The Galaxy S2 will come in various designs on different carriers. Sprint is already up with Epic Touch 4G while AT&T and T-Mobile are the last carriers waiting for their version. although Verizon is not going to feature Galaxy S2, there are rumors about the carrier getting the high-end Samsung phone to compete with iPhone 5. According to reports, Verizon is waiting to get “Nexus Prime”, the ultimate Android flagship phone which will most likely be the first phone to feature Android 4.0 “Ice Cream Sandwich”

Operating system: Apple’s iOS 5, which was officially announced recently, is expected to come along with iPhone 5. But most of the features which were unveild during the iOS 5 even back in June points that these features are already found in the Android operating system. and with Android Ice Cream Sandwich lurking in the corner, it will be interesting to see how the new operating system from Android can overshadow iOS 5. recent reports show that the Ice Cream Sandwich OS has some features of Gingerbread and Honeycomb combined together with better tweaks and the new OS will definitely help reduce the majority of the fragmentation issues on Android devices. Android is more customizable, has more widgets, and has fewer restrictions. Also, the OS will be more functional and will feature a more fluid interface. The iPhone 5 is going to have to top this in order to do better.

NFC: there have been reports since early this year that Apple is testing an iPhone that incorporates Near Field Communication technology. Users can simply pay for goods by waving their iPhone in front of a contactless payment scanner. Mobile-payment services using NFC will be a hot segment in the future. The technology could offer features that allow multiple mobile devices to sync for speedier information exchange and gaming.

However, Galaxy S2 supports the NFC chip that allows for simplified transactions, data exchange and connections with a touch. some rumors have revealed that Apple’s fifth generation iPhone will have mobile payment accessibility. Apple is expected to team up with PayPal for this.

Connectivity: The Galaxy S2 device offers amazing connectivity as it offers high-speed data transfer with 4G technology enabled in it. Also, the Galaxy S2 offers Bluetooth 3.0 HS transfer, Wifi Direct, Allshare (DLNA) and HDMI through MHL. unlike Apple iOS, where you can’t even transfer the pictures taken with the camera through bluetooth, there is no restriction here.

Processor: Galaxy S2 is equipped with Samsung’s own Exynos processor (previously known as Orion), which is a dual core processor based system on Chip (SoC) with a clock speed of 1.2 GHz. it is backed by a Mali 400 GPU and 1 GB of RAM. this is almost equal to the processing power of a desktop machine. The result is that one can play even full HD videos smoothly. With improved versions of Samsung Galaxy S2 about to feature 1.5 GHz processor with 3D graphics support, iPhone 5 needs more to match up to Samsung’s flagship phone. meanwhile, the iPhone 5 will come with the iPad 2’s processor but it is doubtful if it would exceed the 1.2 GHz barrier.

Apps and open source power: though Apple’s iOS is not an open source, 200 million users have downloaded over 15 billion apps from Apple’s App Store. as of may 2011, Apple approved its 500,000th app. meanwhile Android Market has unofficially passed through 500,000 apps. Anyone can get access to the source of Android to better the system. if any weaknesses are found in the open source community, they are quickly fixed.

Battery and Memory: there is removable battery and expandable memory in Samsung Galaxy S2 whereas iPhone’s previous versions don’t offer this privilege. in case of iPhone users have the exchange the entire handset to find a solution for battery fix.

Quite a few smartphones have slots that support a range of memory cards which allow you to keep one card in the device for a permanent storage solution, and still have a slot available for cards from your camera or other device. With the falling price of memory cards, you could have several cards with music and videos tucked away in the carrying case.

HDMI: Apple offers an expensive HDMI adapter to satisfy geeks. However, Galaxy S2 has MHL port with HDMI support functionality. HDMI connects digital audio/video sources (such as set-top boxes, DVD players, HD DVD players, Blu-ray Disc players, AVCHD camcorders, personal computers (PCs) and video game consoles such as the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360, and AV receivers) to compatible digital audio devices, computer monitors, video projectors, tablet computers, and digital televisions.

Meanwhile, the rumors about iPhone 5 suggest that the smartphone will be a world phone with SIM-less Design and curved glass display. The fire-proof iPhone will have wireless charging, rectangular home button, 8-megapixel camera, multi-core A5 processor and Imagination Technologies’ PowerVR Series6 mobile graphics processing architecture for gaming support, HSPA 4G support and iCloud support.

Digital Business Card Apps Tested: The Future Is Not Quite Ready

Do you have your business card on you? do you have your phone with you? no and yes? That’s what I thought. of course you remember to carry your business cards for trade shows and industry events–but what about on a daily basis, for those random coffee-house encounters, or for those times when you want to connect with someone at a party who happens to work for a company you want to do business with?

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It may be easy enough to create business cards and print your own cards, but remembering to carry them is an entirely different matter. with the following free smartphone apps and services, you can carry a digital version of your card and easily share it with anyone. the people you meet don’t even need to have the same app themselves, as many of these tools also allow you to send your card via email.

Many of these apps add features that paper business cards can’t offer, such as location and event tracking–so you can remember where a certain card came from–or matching widgets to add to your website. and some will import your information from Facebook or LinkedIn, or allow you to organize your information into multiple cards representing various side businesses or freelance projects so that you can share only the information that’s relevant to a particular contact.

A relatively new player in the digital business card arena, CardFlick just launched its iPhone app at TechCrunch Disrupt in San Francisco earlier in September–and it has already seen more than 17,000 downloads. An Android app is coming soon. the iPhone app requires iOS 4.0 or later, though I found it susceptible to crashing on an iPhone 3G (not 3GS). the developers are very active, being a new startup, and the app is already up to version 1.02, so they should fix the crashes and bugs quickly.

CardFlick creates clean, professional-looking cards, but gives you only one.You can create your CardFlick card by importing your information from Facebook, or just entering it manually. It doesn’t have many fields to fill out, however, so entering your information by hand doesn’t take too long. I chose to enter my information on the CardFlick website, as the iPhone app didn’t seem to save my changes. You get only one card, so you have to decide how personal you want the card to be. Though the app has just 14 card designs to choose from right now, all of them look professional.

After you have set up your card, you simply flick the card to the top of the screen to send it to any nearby phone that has the app open; the app finds nearby users via GPS, and then sends the card over Wi-Fi or 3G. If your intended recipient doesn’t own the CardFlick app, you have the option to send the card via email.

Once you receive someone else’s card, you can add it to your contacts. the cards remain connected to the cloud; when you update your information, the updates push out to everyone who already has your card.

Right now, CardFlick is a minimal app with a simple website. the options are thin, but the designs are attractive. Custom designs are coming soon, too. the idea of “flicking” cards over to other users is fun, and you can always email the card as a backup. This is a good app to try if you use an iPhone and need to carry only one card.

Available for iPhone only, SnapDat offers plenty of options for creating business cards, including importing data from your contacts, creating a card from a custom background, or using a scanned image of your current paper card. SnapDat also holds multiple cards that you can choose from when it’s time to send one; that way, you can keep one card with personal information, another with your business information, and another with your freelance or consultant information.

SnapDat has more design options and allows you to carry multiple cards.the cards have additional input fields for extra phone numbers or email addresses. You can import information from your iPhone address book, and the cards can have links to LinkedIn, MySpace, Plaxo, Twitter, or even an embedded YouTube video. the service integrates with VistaPrint to provide options for turning your digital business card into the paper kind, as well.

Incoming cards are geo-stamped with location data, and can include messages and reminders to help you recall when and where they came from. You can mark each card as public or private to control whether the recipient of your card can share it with other people. the cards are also interactive–you can place a call or send an email message from the app.

Sent cards go to the other user’s SnapDat SnapID (you set up a SnapID when you first open the app), but you can also send the card to the person’s email address if they don’t have the app or a SnapID. You can make cards public via Facebook, which puts it on your wall, or through Twitter–although on Twitter the card blasts out as a public tweet rather than as a direct message or “@” reply.

SnapDat is a robust app for iPhone users who need to carry multiple cards, or who want an easy way to turn their digital cards into paper ones.

In addition to the app, CardCloud gives you a contact website with links to get in touch.the Cardcloud app is available for iPhone, Android, and other smartphone platforms via a mobile version of its website. It allows you to carry multiple business cards, with information that it pulls from LinkedIn or that you enter manually when you sign up. You can import information from contacts, but in my tests this app kept mixing in information from other contacts as well, and I ended up having to create my cards manually.

You can connect your business cards to a wide variety of social accounts, including (deep breath) About.me, delicious, DeviantArt, Facebook, Foursquare, GitHub, Google Profiles, Gtalk, Hyves, LinkedIn, Mobypicture, Picasa, Skype, SlideShare, SoundCloud, Tumblr, Twitter, Vimeo, Xing, and YouTube. unfortunately, my attempts to add services from the mobile app didn’t stick, and I had to add them from the Cardcloud website.

Sent cards transmit as a peer-to-peer transfer when both parties have the app, or you can email. the app will look for people nearby to share with via your smartphone’s GPS. You can choose one business card to be public; it gets a URL so that you can point people directly to a website where they can connect with you or download the card. Cardcloud also provides a few lines of JavaScript so that you can add your card as a widget to your own website.

The Cardcloud website keeps track of the business cards you share and receive. You can take notes on the virtual back of a card, and then add the card to your phone’s contact list.

Cardcloud is a good choice for anyone with a non-iOS smartphone. It’s also great for people seeking a quick and easy way to add clickable contact information to their website.

Bump shares data when you and another person bump two phones together. (Image: Bump)Available for both iPhone and Android, Bump has an open API (application programming interface) that allows developers to add “bump” functions to any other app. the Bump app shares data when two phones physically bump together. each phone detects the bump via its accelerometer; using timing and location data, Bump’s servers then connect those two phones for sharing. the Bump app is designed to share all kinds of information, including photos, apps, and contacts. when you share contact information, you can choose which pieces of information to send and which to keep private, so you don’t have to share, say, your home phone number with your new business contact.

Once you have “bumped” someone, that person will stay in your Bump contacts list, and you can send them new information at any time. Bump also has a “virtual bump” feature for connecting with someone far away, but it still requires that person to have the app. You get no option to send contact information via email if the other person does not have the app.

Bump is a fun way to share information, and a great choice for sharing anything with people who already have the app on their phones as well.

Having the digital version of a business card is nice, as it makes entering new contact information directly into your smartphone’s contacts list easy. Digital cards can also carry more data, such as location information and actionable links to social networking services. You can never run out of digital cards to give away, while paper ones disappear quickly. Sharing cards via smartphone is a novel experience, too, and can help you stand out in your new contact’s memory.

Despite all of those benefits, I found myself wishing for paper cards at a recent event. I didn’t want to have to pull out my phone, unlock it, open the app, find the right card, and then end up just having to email it anyway. I felt that I hadn’t really connected with people when I just emailed out my card. and digitizing the physical business cards I brought home is so easy: All of them will go straight into my NeatDesk scanner. the NeatWorks software will read the text on the cards and import the information into my contacts list, which constitutes only one more step than receiving a digital card in the first place.

In the end, there’s still something to be said for physical, paper business cards.

The Fine Art of Ganging Up on Apple

The Apple blogosphere gets together and decides, based on rumors, what Apple should do. They entice readers with these predictions. Then Apple goes its own way, bound by its own realities. Then the bloggers get all upset and bash Apple. Then Apple sells millions of fill-in-the-blank. will it ever end?

I am a bit disappointed with the reaction, in some circles, to yesterday’s Apple presentation. Some felt that Apple’s iPhone 4S was a let down. We heard the same thing back in 2009 when the iPhone 3GS came out, and guess what? it sold very well then, at a hefty price and continues to sell well now, obsolete and entry priced.

There are some who claim that Tim Cook took too long to get around to the meat of the presentation. it seems, in the age of the Internet, we need satisfaction within minutes — or our minds drift. should Apple know better? should Apple gauge its presentations based on the Attention Deficit Disorders of peripatetic journalists? I think Apple marches to the beat of its own drummer, and it did a lot of things right on Tuesday.

Apple does everything for a reason. Those reasons are not always divulged to the press for the sake of good form and politics. for example, perhaps Apple wanted to get everyone on the Internet grooved in and solidly connected before mr. Cook jumped the gun. Perhaps, knowing the the TV news was there, the company had certain messages that it wanted the TV news to visualize at certain times. there could be all kinds of things going on that we don’t take into account as we jump to quick analysis.

As for the iPhone 4S, there are some who claim that it should have been called the iPhone 5 just to satisfy a personal, self-imposed desire and time table. This hilarious Hitler spoof video sends up (WARNING: R-rated.) all that attitude. one quote I really liked was: “I want people to know that I’m better than they are. how can this happen if they can’t tell the new phone from the old?”

Many had an emotional investment in a slimmer, sleeker iPhone that would, by the way, require a whole new generation of cases. Maybe the industry isn’t ready for that yet, especially in this economy. Perhaps a slimmer iPhone would set a bad precedent — the battery space will be too small for battery killing 4G/LTE next year. Do you want your iPhone 5 to get thicker? Perhaps Apple has learned, based on manufacturing lessons, that retooling for a whole new external design every 12 months doesn’t work so well anymore. Along those lines, Tim Bajarin just published a very sane and sensible response that I liked: “Why Apple didn’t Release the iPhone 5”

Yesterday, Bryan Chaffin published a chart that I helped with comparing the iPhone 4S to the highly regarded Motorola Droid Bionic. I’ve also looked in detail at the Samsung Galaxy SII specs. What I’ve found is that Apple is doing just fine against the competition with the iPhone 4S. Customers loved the iPhone 4; maybe it’s sensible to ride that wave a bit longer. Again, it’s Apple’s time table, not ours.

We all have our self-imposed ideals and hopes. many of us who cover Apple professionally 24 x 7 feel that we’ve come to know the company well. Readers come to us for our expertise, and the best observers of Apple provide valuable insights. They prepare us for our life as an Apple customer. (I try to be one of those.) this is well and good. Regrettably, I fear that the Internet age has made some of us all too edgy, impatient, maybe even a little arrogant — ready to push our own agenda too hard instead of letting Apple do its thing and report on it. Everything Apple does has a reason behind it. It’s our job to find out what that is.

It was pointed out to me that Antennagate didn’t stop the iPhone 4 from being phenomenally successful. Let’s wait and see how the customers react to the iPhone 4S. The sales numbers will tell the real story.