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Posts Tagged ‘iTunes store’

Got an app idea for that? Make it happen

Thursday, June 14th, 2012

 

By Allan Maurer

So, you think you have a great idea for a hot iPhone or iPad app but don’t have the wherewithal to make it happen? There’s a new company for that. Columbia, SC-based 52apps plans to create a new app every week from ideas submitted by the public and share download royalties.

The company, which is holding its first “App Idea Day” and launch party at 11:30 a.m tomorrow in Columbia, is the brainchild of two seasoned technology entrepreneurs and two young coders who built their first apps while still in High School in Arkansas.

The 52apps story began with a phone call to Stephen Leicht from his friend Bill Kirkland, fomerly CEO of Collexis Holdings, and entrepreneur in residence at the University of South Carolina. A woman sitting next to Kirkland in church saw him taking electronic notes and told him her son had created an iPad app for that.

Kirkland wanted Leicht to meet with the woman and her son at a Lexington, SC Starbucks. Initially, “I told him I didn’t have time to meet with a lady and her son with an iPad app,” he says.

Leicht, CEO of 52apps, was previously executive vice president and COO of Collexis Holdings Inc., a developer of knowledge management and discovery software, acquired by Reed Elsevier in July 2010.

While at Collexis, Leicht had a leadership role in more than $18 million in private operational fundraising, two company acquisitions, and the company’s initial public offering. He also held several positions with IBM and prior to that started, ran and sold International Telecommunications Distributors.

Started building apps at 17

But eventually, Kirkland convinced him to meet with the woman and her son, Christopher Thibault, co-founder and an engineer with 52apps, in January this year.

“He explained that when he was 17 and still in high school, he and his friend Brendon Lee (now co-founder & lead developer at 52apps), had built an app called “Algebra Solver,” essentially an advanced calculator, as a tool for their own use in math classes.

smartnote

A smartnote screen shot.

“In their freshman year in college, they converted it to the iPad and built another app, “Smartnote,” intended to eliminate the need to carry notebooks and texts to classes, and Chris carried only an iPad for the rest of his undergraduate career.”

Half a million downloads later

That was all nice, but Leicht wanted to know the nitty-gritty business details. Did they try to sell it?

Yes, they had put it in the iTunes store.

Did it get any downloads?

Yes, Thibault said, “We had some moderate success.”

H’mmm, thought Leicht. What is “moderate” success?

Smartnote, Thibault said, had been downloaded more than half a million times.

Half a million times? “That got my attention. Now I was interested,” Leicht says.

He asked, “Do you know how often it’s used?”

The real kicker

On an average day, he was told, it’s opened 250,000 times. Not only that, the two students had built a store inside the app allowing users to buy other features and were seeing 40,000 to 50,000 downloads a day there.

And then came the real kicker. The two had created a library of tools and modules for creating mobile apps that meant they could build a fully-functioning product in two or three days.

After some testing the verified they indeed could create an app in days, Leicht and Kirland were sold and along with Thibault, Lee, and CFO Mark Murphy, another former Collexis Holdings exec, they created 52apps.

Now, the company wants to create an app a day for the next year using ideas generated by the public (compensating idea generators with shared royalties).

The company was recruited to the USC Columbia Incubator by Kirkland after the launch.

App Idea Day

What: 52apps App Idea Day & Company Kick-Off Party
When: Friday, June 15, 11:30 a.m. EDT
Where: First Floor Theater, IT-oLogy, 1301 Gervais Street, Columbia, SC 29201
Why: Introduce new company, provide opportunity for people to make money from their app ideas
RSVP: www.52apps.com

StoryMark: give your smartphone pix a voice

Monday, May 14th, 2012

By Allan Maurer

StoryMark

With the StoryMark mobile app, you can take a photo of your child's birthday party and add sound of everyone singing happy birthday.

How can you make a still photograph shot on a smartphone tell more of a story? Add sound. That’s the idea behind Atlanta-based StoryMark’s mobile app, currently available for the iPhone with an Android version not far behind.

Taking and sharing photos is big business, as Instagram’s billion-dollar sale to Facebook makes plain. InfoTrends reports that more than 11 billion photos were taken with mobile devices and shared online in 2010 with expectations that number will double by 2015 across social networks.

But unless you shoot video, the pictures are silent. StoryMark’s mobile app gives them a voice without requiring the fatter video files.

We interviewed StoryMark founder and President Dale McIntyre following the firm’s appearance at TechMedia’s Digital Summit in Atlanta May 9-10, where McIntire says they handed out 600 cards printed for the event in less than six hours.

Hot conference experience

“We ran out because it was such an active conference. There were people from all sorts of companies. Developers, entrepreneurs, venture funds, CEOs, marketers. We made a lot of good contacts and I would recommend the conference to anyone, anytime.” (TechMedia’s next two events are Digital East in DC in October and The Internet Summit in Raleigh in November.)

McIntyre says his four-person company, funded by private investors, expects to seek additional funding in the future.

Currently, it is giving away the first version of its StoryMark app in the Apple iTunes store, but the firm will be adding features to monetize it soon.

The app allows users to shoot a photo and then add sound, which it marries together. “Often people shoot video just to get the sound,” McIntyre says.

The company developed the app the hard way, he notes, creating specific code for each phone rather than storing it on an Internet server. That’s so users don’t have to store their personal photos on an Internet server.

A basic, simple idea

Dale McIntyre

Dale McIntyre

“It’s a basic, simple idea,” McIntyre says. “You take a photo and add up to 30 seconds of audio. That’s enough time to tell a good story. We wanted to keep the files a good size for email and texting. The file is about the same size as the original image from an iPhone and everyone is used to emailing those.”

Once recorded, the app marries the audio and image, which can then be shared on social networks or saved to the user’s iPhone library.

“People are finding all sorts of ways to use it,” McIntyre says. “To capture their kids’ voices, or grandmom telling stories about her old photos, bloggers sharing travel and dining experiences, doctors, real estate agents.”

McIntyre says he feels two ways about the Instagram sale.

“It’s good for the industry overall,” he says. “It shows the tech industry that apps can take off and become worth a lot. It pushes companies to take technology to the next level. Mobile apps is definitely where people are going.”

But there is a downside, he adds. “There is a lot of pressure if everyone thinks your company can do the same thing. Those things are wildly unique and that’s not what you should be shooting for. You should shoot for a company with a solid product.”

McIntyre says the company will be looking for additional funding down the road and at present plans to stay in Atlanta.”

“It’s a great place for tech companies with no end of talent to select from,” he adds.

HTC loses patent suit; short book & film top iPad app sales, Shatner vs. Google+

Monday, July 18th, 2011

The International Trade Commission has ruled that smartphone maker Taiwan-based HTC Corp. violated two Apple Inc. patents. HTC has said it thinks it has a strong case for appeal, but has not yet completed its analysis of the ITC finding. Ten patents were in dispute in a case that dates back to March 2010.

HTC makes the HTC Incredible, and HTC Arrive Windows Phone 7. It’s so-called “Facebook” phone, with social networking features, goes on sale today from AT&T. HTC has received generally excellent reviews for its hardware. We recently tested an Arrive Windows Phone 7 and found it one of the easiest to use of the half dozen smartphones we’ve tried. It’s intuitive interface makes signing up to you Internet accounts, using the camera, or playing games a frustration-free experience.

HTC, which has a research and development lab at the Durham, NC, American Tobacco Campus, has sold 9.7 million smartphones based on Google’s Android operating system in the first quarter.

“The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore” iPad App

-For the first time, an interactive book App outsold all other categories of Apps — games, utilities and entertainment. Moonbot Studios, a multi-platform storytelling company, today announced “The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore” App, an animated short film and book for iPad, was the #1 top paid iPad App and #2 top grossing iPad App on the App Store during the week of July 11.

The animated short film continues to be accepted at national and international film festivals. “The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore” App is available for $4.99 from the App Store on iPad or at www.itunes.com/appstore. A stand-alone version of the short film is available for $2.99 on iTunes or at www.itunes.com.

Captain Kirk kicked off Google+?

Capt. KirkWilliam Shatner, the actor who portrayed Captain Kirk in Star Trek, if anyone reading this blog could possibly not know that, tweeted that he received a notice from Google+ that his Google+ account had been flagged for “violating standards,” according to a tweet he posted Monday, July 18.

His tweet: “My Google+ account was flagged for violating standards. Saying hello to everyone apparently is against the rules maybe I should say goodbye?”

We can just hear the dialog: “Uhura, establish Google+ Communications.”

“Sorry Captain, something seems to be wrong. Perhaps the Klingons are interfering with our communications channels.”

Tech Crunch speculates that it is more likely just a beta glitch and Shatner’s account will probably be reinstated.

Shatner, of course, is also known for touting Priceline in an endless series of TV commercials.