STAR TREK MOVIE INSPIRES APPS
I just got back from seeing the new Star Trek movie and I give it
five out of five hard drives. I've been a big fan of Star Trek and
most of its spin-offs throughout the years. I remember watching the
original TV show broadcasts and waiting every week for the next
episode. This latest movie takes you back to how all of the original
characters met and does a really nice job of capturing how they all
interact with each other.
Star Trek memorabilia throughout the years has been huge, with
everything from action figures to replicas of hand phasers,
communicators and even Tricorders. I have an excellent Star Trek
screen saver that I run from time to time. It's been around for a
few years but in case you didn't know about it, check out the System
47 screen saver available in Windows and Macintosh versions. It
emulates the LCARS (an acronym for Library Computer Access/Retrieval
System) computer screen displays that were made popular on the Star
Trek Next Generation, Deep Space Nine and Voyager TV series as well
as several of the more recent Star Trek movies. You can download the
free screen saver at: www.mewho.com/system47.
The Star Trek fantasy lives on the iPhone as well. Currently there
are two iPhone apps that turn your iPhone into a Tricorder. The
first is entitled iLCARS (.99 cents). This little app does a
marvelous job of emulating a Tricorder. The sound effects and the
screens are an excellent depiction of how an Star Trek Tricorder
would actually look and should be most any Trekker's fantasy come
true.
iLCARS lets you select from three different modes, each with its own
corresponding visual display. These include a radar-type scanning
circle complete with little red blips, a Geological anomalies
display that interacts with the iPhone accelerometer when you shake
it and a several other options that just make it fun to play with
it.
The other Tricorder app is Tricorder-580 (.99 cents). This one also
adheres to Federation guidelines in its design and sports a variety
of interactive displays along with lots of buttons you can touch and
manipulate. Needless to say, while waiting for the Star Trek movie
to begin, I decided to test both of these apps out and fired them up
while waiting in line and when seated in the theatre waiting for the
movie to begin. The reaction was overwhelming. Everyone wanted to
know what my iPhone was doing and where they could get the apps once
I told them they were Tricorder apps that you can get at the iTunes
store.
If you're looking for some Star Trek fun now that Star Trek is back
in fashion with the new movie, the iPhone is where it's at.
By the way, since my column this week is about frivolous apps and
screen savers, here's a few more fun iPhone apps you can download to
be the hit of the party. Vibrazor (.99 cents) turns your iPhone into
an electric razor. Just flip the big switch and you hear the
distinctive electric razor buzz and feel the vibrations. Just run
the iPhone up and down across your face whenever you need a quick
shave. It's good for lots of laughs. Koi Pond (.99 cents) puts an
beautifully rendered Koi Pond complete with a variety of fish,
crickets, dragonflies, frogs and plants which you can manipulate by
touching the iPhones screen. It's actually somewhat therapeutic and
quite soothing to watch as your finger splashes the surface while
the Koi swim over to be felt. I put it down on the table and
everyone wants to touch it.
Finally check out Labyrinth ($2.99). It's a beautifully rendered
wooden maze and steel ball that you must tilt and avoid holes into
which the ball may fall. The latest version sports a 3D look. You'd
swear the walls of the puzzle actually exist because the shadows and
walls move correspondingly to the tilting. It's just something you
have to see to believe.
So there you have it. A virtual cornucopia of wasted time on the
iPhone that will bring you hours of enjoyment. Sounds like a good
deal to me.
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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