Independent developers have a finite amount of time in which to put together their smartphone apps, and they obviously want to get the maximum return on their work. Taking their Android apps and porting them across to iOS is certainly a time consuming practice, assuming the particular developer has the technical know-how to do the work.
Flare is an iPhone app that lets users easily shoot HDR video from their device's camera and share the full-quality result on multiple social networks.
iWork, Apple's productivity suite for Mac and iPad has now made its debut on the iPhone and iPod touch. All three programs: Pages, Numbers and Keynote are available on the smaller devices as of today.
Free apps are great, especially when they normally cost money. If they're as useful and as popular as WhatsApp, well, that's just a bonus isn't it? Now the every-popular cross-platform messaging app WhatsApp Messenger for iPhone is free, you owe it to yourself to give it a whirl.
Rumors on a Japanese site suggest that a future iPhone model, allegedly called the iPhone 4S, is shipping sometime between late July and early August and will be a smaller step up from the currently available iPhone 4.
There is nothing more irritating than having your phone spammed by calls from numbers you don't know. Chances are they're either robots asking you automated questions from a list on a questionnaire, or one of the many company's that manage to get hold of the renewal date for your mobile phone. The problem is though, there's only one way to really find out and that means giving the offending number a call back. Not ideal.
Apple has never been too keen on BitTorrent clients, blocking every single one from ever reaching the App Store. But even if you don't want to jailbreak your phone, there's a way around this restriction, and best of all, it's totally free!
Picture yourself: you're in your living room watching TV, but left your PC on upstairs. You have nothing with you but your phone and don't want to miss a bit of the show your watching. How can you turn off your computer and still not miss your show? This iOS App might be the answer.
Yesterday, we reported that Peter Hajas, the head developer of MobileNotifier would be stepping down. Now, one day later, we're seeing the last ever release from him: MobileNotifier Beta 5.
On the current version of iOS, by default, removing folders is a fairly convoluted and time-consuming process, which forces users to drag out every single item inside that folder until it's finally empty and deletes itself. This tweak will change that forever.

