White iPhone 4 produces long lines in Beijing

The white Apple iPhone 4 made its retail debut today, and China is one market where demand is high for the long-awaited device. According to a report from Computerworld, hundreds of customers lined up outside the Apple Store in Beijing to buy the long-delayed white model.

Customers in line confirmed they passed on the black model, which launched in September 2010, and waited for the white one to make its debut. “I don’t like the black color,” said line-waiter Annie Zhang. “I’ve always been waiting for the white-colored iPhone 4.”

Apple’s presence in China is growing at an extraordinary rate. Apple’s iPhone models account for 8.3 percent of China’s smartphone market share, and sales of the iPhone in Q1 2011 grew by 250 percent year over year. The introduction of the white iPhone 4 will boost sales even higher in China, as white devices are popular there; the color white is often associated with purity and fulfillment in Chinese culture (also with funerals and mourning, but that’s probably not what Apple is going for).

White iPhone 4 produces long lines in Beijing originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 28 Apr 2011 12:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rumor: Apple lowering CDMA iPhone 4 orders, even though survey says Apple is #3 US smartphone vendor

It appears that after robust sales in the first few months of the iPhone 4’s life on the Verizon network, demand might be slowing down for the CDMA device. That’s despite new NPD data showing a major impact from the Verizon iPhone, including a hit to Sprint’s results.

In a report discussing first quarter 2011 losses at iPhone supplier Pegatron, Digitimes noted that “market watchers are turning conservative about CDMA iPhone 4 shipments in the future as volumes may not be as strong as expected.” Pegatron was expected to ship about 10 million iPhone 4s in 2011, but recent estimates are in the range of 5 million units.

There are several hypotheses about the slowdown in production of the CDMA-only device. First, demand for the Verizon iPhone may have cooled off when widely publicized reports noted that the carrier’s 3G network was noticeably slower than rival AT&T’s, or when would-be switchers were hit with a barrage of “no simultaneous voice and data” warnings.

Next, it could be that Apple has a true GSM/CDMA “world phone” in the works for later in 2011 and is just clearing the channel for the new model. Finally, many Verizon customers may realize that the iPhone 4 will soon be replaced by a newer model and are just waiting for the next-generation device before switching.

Meanwhile, 9to5 points to the latest NPD report showing Apple holding an astonishing 14 percent of the US smartphone market, behind only LG and Samsung. The Verizon iPhone launch certainly helped push that number, along with AT&T and Apple’s aggressive discounting of the iPhone 3GS after the iPhone 4 hit the market. Since NPD is looking at historical sales data while Digitimes is looking ahead to supplier and component forecasts, it is possible that both stories are right: the Verizon iPhone had a killer launch, but it may not have legs through the summer if the iPhone 5 is coming along.

Rumor: Apple lowering CDMA iPhone 4 orders, even though survey says Apple is #3 US smartphone vendor originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 28 Apr 2011 11:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Foxconn employees arrested for leaking iPad 2 design

Remember those iPad 2 cases we saw in December of last year that hinted at the svelte design and rear-facing camera of the new iPad? It appears these cases were the real deal, and three Foxconn employees may have been the source.

According to China-based sznews.com, Foxconn has accused three employees of leaking the iPad 2 case design to accessory companies in China. These three employees were arrested on December 26, 2010 and charged with trade secret violations on March 23, 2011.

Foxconn employees arrested for leaking iPad 2 design originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 28 Apr 2011 11:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Mario clone in App Store, place your bets for how long (Update: It’s gone)

UPDATE: Yeah, as tipster Matt told us, this app has been pulled. That only took a few hours.

You gotta be kidding. I am dying to know who, exactly, at Apple is unfamiliar with Mario the plumber. An intern born in the 90s, maybe? At any rate, go grab this platformer featuring Monino, whose brother was captured by Bowler and is being kept in a castle. Sound familiar? It’s like a mirror universe, I know.

Given how much the iPod touch and iPhone have been hurting Nintendo’s DS sales, we’re likely going to have to wait until the Japanese game company stops making hardware altogether to see a real Mario franchise appear on iOS. Until then (and until someone at Cupertino wakes up to an irritated email), you’ll have this game. Honestly I’m not wasting the 99-cents on it, as the reviews clearly point out the controls are atrocious. You can’t have a decent platformer if the controls aren’t responsive, I don’t care how gussied up to look like a Nintendo rip-off it may be.

Get it while it still exists, which will probably be a few more hours. They didn’t even bother to change Mario’s appearance!

Update: Electricpig posted a video as well, which you can see on the next page.

Thanks for the tip, David!

Continue reading Mario clone in App Store, place your bets for how long (Update: It’s gone)

Mario clone in App Store, place your bets for how long (Update: It’s gone) originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 28 Apr 2011 10:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dear Aunt TUAW: Why does iTunes hate me?

Dear Aunt TUAW,

There’s nothing I love better than to put on a nice long multi-hour playlist while I’m working, but sometimes reality intrudes. I get a call, and I need to pause the tunes.

If I’m visiting the iTunes store on my Macintosh, then the iTunes application totally loses my place in my playlist. I have to restart my shuffled playlist, and I end up hearing song after song that I’ve already listened to repeat in a way that ticks off my subconscious.

Help me Auntie! How do I pause my playlist to take a call and be sure that I don’t lose my place?

Why does iTunes hate me?

Thanks a bunch,

Vittorio F.

Continue reading Dear Aunt TUAW: Why does iTunes hate me?

Dear Aunt TUAW: Why does iTunes hate me? originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 28 Apr 2011 10:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple approves JavaScript iOS games that don’t use a browser

Webkit-free Biolab

Look Ma, no WebKit! Your inner geek and nerd should give each other a little hug this morning as you read about the latest rather cool accomplishment of Dominic Szablewski, creator of the Impact JavaScript HTML 5 game engine.

He’s just released two free games, Biolab Disaster and Drop, which are not, as Szablewski says, the first JavaScript games to be released in the App Store. “Tools like PhoneGap or Titanium make it easy to bundle some HTML pages and JavaScript together in an app and display them in a UIWebView, which is basically just a browser window,” he says.

However, his games are different because they don’t use a browser window to display them.

“They don’t use PhoneGap or Titanium. They don’t even use a UIWebView. Instead, they bypass the iPhone’s browser altogether and use Apple’s JavaScript interpreter (JavaScriptCore) directly. All graphics are rendered with OpenGL instead of in a browser window and all sound and music is played back with OpenAL,” Szablewski says.

What Szablewski has done wasn’t particularly easy, and as games, his offerings aren’t up there with Angry Birds. But his work could open the way for other developers to write more apps with a minimum of fuss. Read his blog for full details of the process.

Apple approves JavaScript iOS games that don’t use a browser originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 28 Apr 2011 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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TUAW’s Daily iOS App: Order and Chaos Online

All right, here we go. Gameloft’s new title is called Order and Chaos Online, and in the Gameloft style, it’s pretty much an iOS remake of Blizzard’s World of Warcraft. Odds are that if you understand that sentence, you probably already know whether you want to go download this or not.

But if not, I’ll explain: Gameloft has a habit, as we’ve said, of making iOS titles that basically rip off larger console titles, and Blizzard’s World of Warcraft is of course the extraordinarily successful massively multiplayer online RPG for PCs. So Gameloft has recreated the MMO on iOS for us, and while it supposedly works as promised (though there’s a Wi-Fi restriction for playing, only four races available and not nearly as much content to start), it’s obviously not quite as good as actually having WoW on iOS.

In this case, a reasonable facsimile might be as good as the real thing, especially if you’re a fan of the real thing. Gameloft’s app is US$6.99 for a universal version, and it comes with three months of gametime for free. After that, you can subscribe for a buck a month, or go for three months for $1.99. There are also in-game purchases of gold and potions for various amounts, which is something WoW hasn’t quite resorted to yet. At any rate, early reviews of Gameloft’s app are good, so if you’re a big WoW fan and wouldn’t mind playing a copy of that game on iOS, check it out.

TUAW’s Daily iOS App: Order and Chaos Online originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 28 Apr 2011 08:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Time Out offering free iPhone city travel guides until May 2

Time Out is offering a selection of its popular city guides for iPhone for free until May 2. Cities the guides cover include Melborne, London, Paris, Berlin, Buenos Aires, Barcelona, Sydney and Zagreb.

Each guide allows you to navigate a city’s tourist spots, nightlife and restaurants easily. As with all Time Out guides, they are written by locals so that you’re sure to get the best information available. Grab the guides while they’re free. Normal pricing is US$4.99 per app. You can download them all here.

Thanks to reader Greg for the tip.

Time Out offering free iPhone city travel guides until May 2 originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 28 Apr 2011 07:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple Store back up, white iPhone now available

Hours after the white iPhone went on sale internationally and a lengthy downtime, it is now available through the US Apple Store, as well as AT&T and Verizon’s websites. As mentioned earlier, the handset should be available at Apple’s brick-and-mortar stores when they open later today. Apple’s front and iPhone pages have yet to be updated with the now-available status of the phone, but will most likely mirror the “finally” ads that are appearing on AT&T and Verizon’s sites.

For those who have been waiting, happy shopping!

Apple Store back up, white iPhone now available originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 28 Apr 2011 05:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Rumor: Apple might have bought iCloud.com

GigaOm is reporting that Sweden-based cloud storage company Xcerion has just sold its iCloud.com domain name for US$4.5 million and that the likely buyer is none other than Apple. Xcerion had previously sold a cloud-based storage service called iCloud, but it’s been rebranded as CloudMe after the sale of the iCloud.com domain.

While GigaOm doesn’t get into specifics, the site says its source is familiar with the company and that the buyer of the domain name is Apple. Currently, the WhoIs information still lists Xcerion as the owner of iCloud.com, but that could be a deliberate move until Apple reveals its new cloud-based services.

Even though GigaOm doesn’t name its source, it does fit in with other reports that Apple is gearing up to launch a digital locker soon. Apple does have a penchant of throwing an “i” in front of everything. If GigaOm’s sources are correct, get ready to say goodbye to iDisk and hello to Apple’s iCloud.

Rumor: Apple might have bought iCloud.com originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 28 Apr 2011 02:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple Store is down, most likely adding white iPhone

The online Apple Store is indeed down, most likely because of the addition of the white iPhone. The phone is now on sale internationally, so it makes sense for the store to go offline while the phone, and associated marketing, is added to the Apple Store. Thanks to all our awesome tipsters out there, and we’ll let you know what changes are available when it’s up!

Apple Store is down, most likely adding white iPhone originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 28 Apr 2011 01:35:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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White iPhone 4 now available for sale internationally

The elusive white iPhone 4 is elusive no more. It’s already gone on sale internationally; this included screenshot is from Vodafone in New Zealand. The white iPhone 4 is expected to see release in several international markets over the course of the day, with release in the US likely to come within the next few hours.

The white iPhone 4 still hasn’t shown up on Apple’s own store site yet as of this writing, not even in countries where the handset has already been available from carriers’ stores for several hours, but it should be available at the company’s US brick-and-mortar stores when they open later today.

If you’ve been waiting this long for the white iPhone 4 to come out, the good news is your wait is now over. The bad news? The iPhone 5 is probably coming out sometime in the next six months, so if you’re the kind of person who has to have the latest and greatest gear, your wait might not be over after all.

White iPhone 4 now available for sale internationally originally appeared on TUAW on Thu, 28 Apr 2011 01:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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White iPhone 4 Now Available Online!

Finally, the long-awaited White iPhone 4 is now available to order online. The Apple.com homepage has been update with: “Finally. The amazing iPhone 4. Now available in white.” You can also get the White iPhone 4 from Apple’s retail stores, AT&T and Verizon Wireless stores and select Apple Authorized Resellers.

The White iPhone 4 is now available in 28 countries in both 16GB and 32GB storage capacities. You can get the 16 GB model for USD.199 and the 16GB model for USD.299 either via online order (apple.com) or at any Apple Store.

White models of iPhone 4 are available as of today in Austria, Australia, Belgium, Canada, China, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, Macau, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Singapore, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland, Sweden, Taiwan, Thailand, UK and the US.

So, are you getting one? via online order? or have already picked it up in-store!

You can follow us on Twitter, Google Buzz, Facebook, and Subscribed to RSS Feed to receive latest updates.

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Calculating Lifetime Value For Freemium Gamers: Calculating retention rates

Matt Tubergen heads Recharge Studios, a wholly owned subsidiary of W3i that invests in the development and marketing/distribution of freemium mobile games.  W3i is a market leader in distributing and monetizing apps with over 500 million apps distributed for W3i clients. Recharge Studios is actively seeking new investment opportunities, if you have a great idea for a game contact us.

In last week’s post we worked towards identifying ways to calculate the Revenue per Daily Active User as part of our Lifetime Value equation. This week, we look at ways to identify another variable in that equation: retention.

What is retention?

Retention is a key metric that speaks to how many users stick with your app day to day after initially being acquired. When attempting to calculate retention rates there are a variety of different ways to drill into the data and group users. Those groups of users, or vintages, may refer to the day they were acquired, the method in which they were acquired (offerwall, organic, advertising etc.)Or the source from which they were acquired (specific publisher source).

Calculating retention rates for mobile apps

Retention is calculated as an average of active users over time. We first have to calculate the daily retention rate on the first day a user is acquired, retention rates are 100%. Let’s say on day 1 100 users are acquired. On day two, 50 of those users are still active, making the retention rate on day two 50%. Now if only 25 of those users return on day three, the third day retention rate for that vintage would be 25%. To calculate the average retention rate for the entire application, we then take an average of all the daily retention rates for the period. . If we want to look at a more formulaic approach we could justify the following:

Retention Rate = Rate X (1 – Attrition Rate), so Day 1 it is (1 – Attrition Rate) and Day 2 it is (x% X (1-Attrition Rate))

For the sake of calculation, we used large, rounded numbers, often times when calculating the retention you’ll work with a larger data set and have a lower average.

Developers can also dive deep to understand specific retention rates by different user groups/vintages. By segregating by vintage, developers can start to identify different trends that will ultimately help make strategic decisions on user acquisition strategies. Consider the following:

User Group1 = Week 1 Users Acquired

Revenues1 = Week 1 Revenues Earned

Rev/User1 = User Group1 Rev/User for Week 1

 

User Group2 = Week 2 Users Acquired

Revenues1 = Revenues earned by this group in their Week 1

Rev/User1 = User Group1 Rev/User for Week 1

Note on retention rates

This post looks to identify, simply, how to calculate retention but its worth noting that projecting or forecasting retention rates may also come into play. Additionally, there are different ways to look at and interpret the data depending on what kind of information you’re trying to gain from your users.

Next week we’ll bring it all together to look at calculating lifetime value.

Do you have a question about freemium gaming or a topic you’d like us to explore? Let us know in the comments or catch us on twitter @rechargestudios or @w3i.

Freemium Game Blogs are published in partnership with the series on W3i’s corporate blog.

Quotebook iPhone App Review [App Giveaway]

Want to win a copy of Quotebook? Post your favorite motivational quote on my Facebook post HERE to be entered into a drawing for a Promo Code ($2 value).

Quotebook iPhone App Review

Quotebook for iPhone ($2 as of this writing) is a cool little app that grabbed my attention because it serves a good purpose for me as a lover of inspirational quotes.

Every now and then I come across a quote that I want to remember, and what do I do? Usually I paste the quotation into a note in my iPhone. The result is that over several months I accumulate many different notes with quotes in them. Sure, I could paste all my favorite quotes into one single note, but this is not ideal since I have such a mess of other notes in my Notes app — shopping lists, account numbers, and other random things I’d like to remember — and no good way of organizing them.

Quotebook is an app that is intended solely for storing and organizing your favorite quotes in one place. Maybe you read a quote on a poster somewhere that you like. Put it in your Quotebook. Maybe you are reading a book and you want to jot down several excerpts. Put them in your Quotebook and note the Source (i.e. the name of your book).

Entering a Quote

To enter a quote into your Quotebook, simply hit the “+” sign in the app and paste your quote in the textfield. You can also set an Author, Source, Rating, and one or more Tags.

Browsing Your Quotes

What makes Quotebook great is that you can filter your quotes by any one of the aforementioned categories, as described below.

By Quote

This page displays a list of all of your quotes. In the settings, you can choose whether to display your quotes from newest to oldest or vice versa.

Quotebook Quotes

By Author

You can display your quotes alphabetically by author. What is really neat about this feature is that you can tap on an author and Quotebook will bring up the Wikipedia entry for that author, if one exists. It will even pull up other quotes from this author from Wikiquote.

Quotebook Authors

By Source

You can display your quotes by source, which is a great feature if you have entered many quotes from a specific source into your Quotebook. Then you can browse all the quotes that you enjoyed from a particular book, or newspaper article, etc.

Quotebook Sources

By Tag

You can also categorize and sort your quotes by Tag.

Quotebook Tags

Suggested Improvements

I think Quotebook is a fantastic, minimalistic app that serves a focused purpose that will appeal to people who love quotes. However, if the developer would like to really soup up this app, I think it would be great to have the ability to add photos to the app as well as audio.

So if, for example, you see a billboard that’s really funny, you can snap a photo of it and add it to the Quotebook. Or if you want to simply say a quote out loud and record it instead of typing it out, you could do that as well.

How to Win a Copy of Quotebook

Matt, the developer of Quotebook, has kindly offered to give away a Promo Code to one lucky reader of AppleiPhoneReview.com. To enter the drawing to win a copy of Quotebook ($2 value), all you have to do is post your favorite inspirational quote as a comment on my Quotebook Facebook post HERE and I will send the winner a message with the promo code by Thursday, April 28.

Quotebook iPhone App Review [App Giveaway] is a post from Apple iPhone Review.