You Can Now Explore 360-Degree Videos On Apple TV, No VR Headset Required

Though 360-degree video has been hot in 2015, the immersive experience has largely been limited to virtual reality headsets, mobile devices, and laptop screens. Now, 360-degree videos are coming to your TV, thanks to a new Apple TV app created by the Disney-backed virtual reality company Littlstar.

Apple TV users can explore any part of the video by using the Siri remote to tweak their viewpoint. They can see a ballerina perform at Lincoln Center, visit Yellowstone and Greenland, or watch a boxing match. Littlstar’s library contains thousands of 360-degree videos produced by major brands like Discovery, National Geographic, Showtime, and Disney, as well as curated content from individual contributors.

“Users can now view 360 videos on their televisions, and experience immersive video the same way they would a traditional TV program,” Tony Mugavero, founder and chief product officer of Littlstar, said in a statement.

As major companies invest in 360-degree video—Facebook recently introduced the medium to its platform and is selling virtual reality spots to advertisers—bringing the format to life on TV screens seems like the next logical step.

Apple names its iPhone Apps of the Year, shares bestsellers across all categories & more

Apple has named live video sharing app Periscope its App of the Year 2015, and Tomb Raider’s puzzle spin-off Lara Croft GO as its Game of the Year. iPhone automation app Workflow won Most Innovative app, while Instagram took home the prize for Best App on the iPhone 6s.

In all, Apple picked 25 iPhone apps each for both general and games categories. It also shared the top 10 best-selling paid apps, most-downloaded free apps and top-grossing apps …

The best-selling paid iPhone apps of 2015 were Heads Up!, Fantasy Premier League 2015/16 and Minecraft: Pocket Edition. For free apps, WhatsApp, Dubsmash and Messenger headed the list, while the top-grossing apps were Clash of Clans, Candy Crush Saga and – despite Apple Music – Spotify.

Eddy Cue told the Telegraph that the developer community never failed to impress him.

“You kind of have to pinch yourself, the developer community is a huge part of what we’re doing and they continuously impress the heck out of me and our customers with the apps they’re able to create,” he said. “Just when you think there can’t be anything new, they come and innovate and come up with things we didn’t think were possible.”

Apple also shared its best-selling downloads in other categories:

Apple’s top 10 picks for Apps of the Year are:

  1. Periscope
  2. Enlight
  3. Robinhood – Free Stock Trading
  4. Workflow (Most Innovative)
  5. Instagram (Best for iPhone 6s)
  6. HBO Now
  7. Hopper – Airfare Predictions
  8. Darkroom – Photo Editor
  9. Lark – Personal Weight Loss Coach
  10. The Everything Machine by Tinybob

Its top 10 games are:

  1. Lara Croft GO
  2. Fallout Shelter
  3. Mr Jump
  4. Dark Echo (Most Innovative)
  5. Warhammer 40,000: Freeblade (Best for iPhone 6s)
  6. Hearthstone: Heroes of Warcraft
  7. Vainglory
  8. Dungeon Boss
  9. Puzzle Craft 2
  10. PAC-MAN 256

uBar 3.0 Released – Brings Custom Timepieces, Visual Window Previews, More

Brawer Software has announced the release of uBar 3.0, an update to their popular app and window manager for Mac OS X.

uBar 3.0 Released - Brings Custom Timepieces, Visual Window Previews, More

Version 3.0 adds the ability to place uBar on any side of the screen, just like the stock OS X Dock. However, uBar one-ups the standard Dock by allowing itself to be placed at the top of the screen. uBar also offers a beautiful timepiece for display above the built-in calendar, as well as offering powerful Shift-Click Shortcuts for closing windows and apps.

Features include:

  • All Positions (New) – Users can position uBar on any side of the screen: bottom, left, right, or top
  • Window Previews (New) – See a visual preview of the windows within by just hovering the mouse over an app
  • Timepieces (New) – Built-in or custom dial timepieces can now display above the calendar when hovering over the clock area
  • Activity Mode – Hold a custom modifier key to see CPU and Memory usage for Apps
  • Multi-monitor Support – Users with multiple monitors can set uBar to display on the screen of their choice
  • App Badges – uBar displays red App badges that you can read
  • Easily Spot Unresponsive Apps – Unresponsive Apps display a hatched red background
  • Drag-and-Drop – Simply Drag-and-drop folders and files onto Apps to quickly launch them
  • uBar Menu – List Applications, System Preferences, and custom Apps and Folders
  • Favorites Area – Users can add their favorite apps, folders, and files to the Favorites area
  • Clock Area – The clock area displays the day, date, and time
  • Hover Calendar – Hover over the clock area to display the Calendar
  • Expandable Rows – Drag the edge to expand uBar up to five rows in height
  • Themes – Themes display as System (i.e. Automatic), Light, Dark, Platinum Neue, Now Playing, or Custom
  • Sizes – Set the size of the uBar Dock to Automatic, Small, Medium, Large, or Huge
  • Pinning – Pin or unpin uBar to any corner of the screen
  • Application Order – Show Applications by Launch, Alphabetical, or Manual Order. They can be excluded as well
  • Window Grouping – Set window grouping

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uBar has found acceptance in the world of enterprise, with employees at a number of companies using it daily on their Macs. These companies include: Apple, Google, Facebook, HP, Salesforce, Sequoia, Tumblr, Volvo, Yelp, and many more.

uBar 3.0 requires OS X 10.9 Mavericks or higher, a 64-Bit Processor, and 8.7MB hard disk space.

uBar 3.0 is $20, and is available at the Brawer Software website. Current uBar 2 users can upgrade to version 3.0 for $10.

Forecast Bar is the next best thing to having Dark Sky on your Mac.

forecast-bar-featured

Forecast Bar brings all the features you love about Dark Sky to a Mac app. Not only does it look similar to Dark Sky, but it’s powered by the same Forecast API which means you’re getting the same accurate weather predictions. Forecast Bar also works the way you want it to. Keep it in the menu bar or let it sit in your dock. Enable certain notifications and display a 3-day, 5-day or 7-day forecast — up to you. With its detailed weather and range of customization options, it should very quickly take your Mac by storm.

Whether you keep Forecast Bar in your menu bar or in the dock, it’s clear the app was meant to be in your menu bar. It works just fine as a dock app, but the window is still tall and slender as if it’s supposed to be dangling from the top of your screen. Don’t let the small footprint fool you though, Forecast Bar is packed with important weather data.

At the top, your standard information about the current conditions is prominent as it is in most weather apps. At a glance you can see the current temperature, high and low for the day and a description of the current weather. This is also where you add or switch locations, view a radar map or get details for severe weather alerts. The accuracy of the Forecast API seems to vary based on your location, but when you’re in one of its better locations, it’s hard to find something more reliable.

Underneath that is where the similarities to Dark Sky really become apparent. By default, a chart will show your 8-hour forecast. However, if rain is on the way within the next hour, this chart will switch to a detailed view of precipitation in the next hour. Below that is the extended forecast, which you can customize the length of in the app’s preferences.

forecast-bar-customize

Additionally, you can click any part of the app — whether it’s current conditions, the hourly chart or the extended forecast — to get more advanced details. These include wind, humidity and UV index that are cleverly organized in pop-up charts alongside the anticipated precipitation amounts. At the very bottom is Time Machine, which lets you pick any date over the past 70 years and see the weather on that day.

The Mac App Store has been pretty void of any decent weather apps for several years and it’s nice to see a solid entry make it through Apple’s gates. Carrot Weather debuted on the Mac recently as well, which is also powered by the Forecast API. It remains one of my absolute favorite picks.

forecast-bar-radar

Meanwhile, Dark Sky has garnered a pretty loyal fanbase on iOS. It features comprehensive forecasts, a pretty decent design and its famous down-to-the-minute weather predictions. Its developers haven’t gotten around to releasing a dedicated Mac app, but they do serve up the Forecast.io website and Forecast API for other developers to take advantage of instead.

Forecast Bar is $5.99 in the Mac App Store, which is less expensive than Carrot Weather, but it does come with some very odd in-app purchases. The app will refresh data every hour, but if you want more up-to-date reports, you’ll have to get them with a purchase. 10-minute updates cost you a one-time fee of — wait for it — $29.99. I can’t see why anyone would pay for that, but the good news is you don’t have to.

Overall, Forecast Bar is a reputable new weather app for the Mac. For six bucks, it’s one you should consider adding to your menu bar.

13 tweaks to check out this weekend

Cydia Expert mode iPhone 6

We’re just days away from Apple unveiling new iOS devices and likely providing an official launch date for iOS 9. With new software come new challenges, and of course the continuation of the cat and mouse game. If rumors hold true, a jailbreak for iOS 9might never happen. We shall see, I guess. In the meantime, let’s enjoy what we have now.

BackupAX Command-Line Edition: The command line version of BackupAZ tool ($2.99)

BBM+: a suite of tweaks for BBM (free)

beINairPlay: lets you use AirPlay in the beIN Sports app (free)

BetterShutDown: an improved power down menu (free)

ColorFlow 2: modifies the Music app, Lock screen, and Spotify to match the album artwork($1.99)

Earth LockScreen: puts a rotating Earth on your Lock screen (free)

Indago: a floating browser for your iPhone ($1.99)

InstaBetter: a suite of tweaks for Instagram (free)

InstaTools: lets you zoom, download and share photos on Instagram (free)

Keek: give you a quick glance at apps in Control Center ($1.99)

NoSafariHistory: disables browsing and search history in iOS 8 (free)

QuickVolumeHUD+: dismisses the volume HUD quicker than normal (free)

SafariSearchHider: hides searches from history in Safari (free)

Stress-busting app will engross your inner child

recolor - 1

One way I can often determine if an app is worth my time is by putting it through a specific test. If I get so sucked into an app that I forget I’m actually supposed to be gathering thoughts to write up a review, it’s because that app is generally pretty awesome. I had this somewhat rare experience with Recolor, a new coloring book app for adults on iOS.Now hold on, because I was admittedly a bit judgmental, too. I didn’t think I would ever care to use a coloring book. I was never good in art class as a kid and I’m slightly color blind between blue and purple, so pretty much all the signs in my life discourage coloring as a hobby.

But Recolor is different. You don’t have to scribble and try to get colors to fit within the borders. The designs are already drawn. You just need to pick a color and fill in a small block portion of the illustration. Don’t worry, the complex designs have hundreds so it’s not a quick process. Use two fingers to zoom in and out of the canvas to fill in smaller parts.

The beauty of Recolor is how easily it enables creativity. It’s stripped of most artistic functions and just leaves you with the duty of filling in the illustration with whatever colors you want.

Those colors, by the way, are beautiful. They’re arranged in multiple palettes with five colors in each palette. You have the bright and vibrant Salamander, the dull and wintry Into Dreams, the astronomical Star Seeker, the desaturated Cynicide, the diverse Birds of Paradise and the autumnal Broken Glass. There are six other wonderful color palettes as well and you can conveniently unlock those just by sharing a link to Recolor on Facebook.

recolor - 4

Recolor includes over 200 unique illustrations that are allegedly “proven to help you rest your mind,” which I totally believe from experience. The app separates the illustrations into 10 packs: animals, bouquets, fishes, floral, insects, isometric, lowpolys, mandalas, mortes and ornates. Each pack comes with three free illustrations. You can unlock the rest individually for $0.99 per pack or $4.99 to unlock everything.

The pricing method is perfectly fair. Recolor doesn’t have any ads, so you can essentially use most of the app for free and then optionally add in the extras for five bucks — a purchase I’m seriously considering for my newfound artistry.

When you’re done coloring in your masterpiece, tap the check mark at the top to choose an effect for your design. Some examples include marker, crayon, watercolor and shiny. They all look exceptional and instantly add a layer of style. At last, save the final product or share your work of art on your social networks.

Now for a couple of gripes. While I admire the beauty of what’s purposely not included in Recolor, I do wish it had a color picker. When coloring I’d like to be able to select a color I already applied to one part of the image and use it again. Instead, I currently have to go back and browse through pages of palettes to find the one I’m looking for. On that note, it’d be seriously useful if I could also tap the palette title to expand the view and see more than five colors at a time.

Still, I’m pretty happy with the app as it is. I never would have pegged myself as a coloring book advocate. Recolor is beautifully designed, relieves anxiety and gives me a false sense of artistic ability. And I’m hooked on it. You can get it for iPhone or iPad for free with in-app purchases.

Apple TV catches Game Pass service featuring live preseason football games on updated NFL app.

Apple TV users may notice a new coat of paint on the NFL app today. That’s because the set-top box’s NFL channel has received a major update that adds the new Game Pass feature for football fans. We first learned last month that the NFL’s Game Pass service was headed to Apple TV.

Game Pass on Apple TV currently offers up both live and on demand preseason football games both in full and condensed versions for subscribers, plus highlights from each game that anyone can view for free. Game Pass also boasts featuring every NFL game since 2012 in HD without commercials including the last Super Bowl. Beyond 2012, Game Pass includes footage dating back to 2009.

Apple TV NFL Game Pass

Subscribing to Game Pass through Apple TV costs $99.99 with a subscription running through July 31st of next year. Aside from being able to view preseason games out of market, Game Pass offers up “all 256 regular season games on-demand” across various platforms. While it still doesn’t offer up live gameplay for regular season games, a subscription does include access to gameday audio. It wouldn’t be surprising to see the new feature highlighted next week as Apple unveils an updated Apple TV box on September 9th.

Tweaks of the week: FutureLock, MusicScroller, SimpleReach, and more.

Cydia Home iPhone 6

Another interesting week for the jailbreak community. Despite the reports of thousands of iCloud account being compromised by some shady jailbreak tweaks installed from some shady repos you’ve probably never heard of, we’ve seen some good tweaks being released in Cydia.

In case you don’t want to scroll through dozens and dozens of packages, we round up all the new jailbreak tweaks that appeared this week on Cydia.

BootLogoCustomizer: changes the color of your boot logo ($1 )

Bragi: redesigned music controls for Control Center and Reachability ($1)

CCMore: adds more features to Control Center ($1.99)

Docker: doubles the capacity of your iPhone’s dock ($1.99)

Fast Freeze: an Activator action that freezes running apps in memory ($1)

FullResShare: allows you to attache full resolution album artworks for shared songs (free)

FutureLock: drastically enhances the Lock screen with various features ($2.50)

GrabKiller: lets you tap the Control Center grabber to kill all apps in the switcher (free)

Mezode: changes the Messages top bar color to the type of message you’re sending (free)

MusicScroller: adds a pop-up alphabet indicator to the Music app (free)

MusicTransport: sends music or sound effects over phone calls ($2.99)

NoUpdateAll: removes the Update All button in the App Store app (free)

PowerColor: brings custom color gradients to the iOS battery indicator (free)

PulseVolumeAlert: makes a vibration when you listen to music with headphones too loud (free)

QuickSwipe: lets you swipe to dismiss videos in Safari (free)

Rotary Lock: a combination lock for the Lock screen ($0.99)

Sentinel: an extension that gives you more control about numbers you block ($2.99)

SimpleReach: makes Reachability better ($0.99)

SmartClose: puts your app in deep freeze without unloading them (free)

TranslateMe: translate text with ActionMenu (free)

WGradRemover: gets rid of the wallpaper gradient overlay shadow (free)

Treat your ears to awesome Apple Music playlists.

Tired of Apple Music's playlists? Try something even more indie.You can make your own playlists, too, and share them out to friends and family, but what if you want to see other people’s playlists? There’s just no way to pop on to Apple Music and see what playlists strangers are making.

Now, however, a new website called Playlist Hunt brings you the next best thing: a site dedicated to sharing and playing playlists by its members.

With Playlist Hunt, you’re able to browse, search, and create your own playlists on the service’s website, and you can click through any of them to listen right on your iPhone or your Mac via Apple Music (or Spotify).

Head on over to Playlist Hunt and you’ll see a list of playlists that users have created on a daily basis, like “2000s Hip-Hop” or “Run Wild,” a workout playlist created by Natalie Simpson that has “Fast Folk and aggressive Americana guaranteed to open up your stride and push your workout to the limits.”

If you’re tired of the polish of Apple Music’s own playlists, this site might just be the answer to finding new music and playlists from other humans just like you.

Sign-up is free; you simply use Twitter or Facebook to connect to the service, and you can start listening and making your own Apple Music playlists in minutes.

eMail Widget lets you view and manage your inbox from Notification Center.

eMail Widget 2

When it comes to the daily task of rummaging through email messages, I spend the first 30-minutes of my workday just trying to get my inbox under control. I can quickly delete or archive more than half of them, which helps me feel like I’ve made some progress

eMail Widget is a Notification Center app that allows users, not only to see new messages in their inbox, but perform a few basic actions in order to keep things under control without having to open a dedicated app.

Once downloaded and opened, users will be asked to allow the app to give permission to access your Gmail account (currently, eMail Widget only supports Gmail and Google apps). Then, you are all set.

eMail Widget 1

Go to the Today view of your Notification Center and tap the Edit tab at the bottom. Find eMail Widget and add it to your list. Then, you’ll be able to see all new emails in your inbox.

What makes this app stand out is that you can also perform basic actions, like archiving, starring, marking as read, tagging as spam, or throwing away emails. So, you can weed through a bunch of messages without even having to open up your email app.

Currently, this app is bare bones. It will eventually support other email services than Google. However, I’d like to see a few additional features, like the ability to send messages to specific folder, which users could customize.

eMail Widget 3

At only $0.99, eMail Widget is a huge time saver for anyone that gets a large influx of emails that they don’t have time to read through all at once. It is available on the iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch. Download it in the App Store today.