Has that battery bar at the top right corner of your screen ever confused you? You know – one moment it’s half way and 5 minutes later you get a 20% warning?
BatteryStatus is a useful little app that tells you exactly how long your iPhone or iPod touch can keep rocking. It shows your remaining battery percentage and how long it will last in various usage modes.
Waterslide Extreme is a fun game from Dare Digital Ltd.
You control a character (Male/Female) through a series of waterslides amidst a city center background. The aim is to collect as many diamonds and speed boosts as you can, while making sure you don’t fall of the slide.
In your way are also various obstacles - such as crabs and ducks - which slow you down when you hit them. In higher levels, you might also lose a life for going too slow, so watch out!
The controls might take a while to …
Fake Caller is a great app for getting out of a boring meeting, a bad date or an embarassing situation.
Once activated, Fake Caller will make your iPhone (or iPod touch) look like it’s locked and neutral. When the timer period runs out, it will wake up, play your ringtone and display a really authentic-looking caller screen – you can answer or decline a call. Once answered it switches to a fully functional call screen. You can put the call on hold or mute, you can add fictional calls, browse through …
TapDefense is a classsic tower defense game for the iPhone.
You are in charge of defending Heaven’s gates from the hordes of monsters escaping from hell. The enemies travel on a winding road across the screen and you have to build various towers beside the road to stop the monsters from getting into heaven.
All tower types (Arrows, Bombs, Water, Ice, Magic, Storm and Earthquake) have different ranges and damage rates, which can be improved by upgrades. The arrow, bomb and water towers are the basic towers. You can unlock the others …
WritePad is a handwriting-recognition app for iPhone and iPod touch. It lets you write notes by drawing out letters and words on your screen and turns them into text.
The problem is that everyone’s handwriting is different and WritePad has a very hard time getting even one sentence right. At least it has a spare, “normal” keyboard for correcting errors. Just touch the button at the top-right corner of the screen. You can also save your WritePad notes, but you can’t open them in iPhone’s Notes or the other way round.
I …