The Curiosity app – for the “things that make you go hmmmm…”


Did you know that having only 5% of self-driving cars on the road can improve start-and-stop traffic jams? It can according to the National Science Foundation’s Cyber-Physical Systems program. Click here to read more about it. Did you know that cats meow for us? They do it to communicate to us and rarely do it to communicate with other cats. Click here for more information. These are just a couple of fascinating short articles that you can read about every day on the Curiosity app (Android, iOS, Kindle, and web versions). This awesome app has something for everyone. The app spotlights five articles per day in their Daily Digest. In addition, it has hundreds (if not more) articles and short videos on subjects like Animal IQ, Aztec Empire, Beards, Beer, Dogs, Drones, Etymology, Finance, Hair, Jobs, Memory, Myths, Pain, Painting, Parenting, Rain, Relationships, Social Behavior, Teeth, Tickling, etc. The articles and related videos are short and to the point and there are links to additional articles and videos. The app cites many reputable sources for their information like the National Science Foundation, NASA, National Geographic, World Health Organization, several scientific magazines, and several university studies to name just a few.

The Curiosity app even has mind puzzles like this one: “Alice comes across a lion and a unicorn in the forest. The lion lies on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday, and speaks the truth the other days. The unicorn lies on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday, and speaks the truth the other days. Today, the lion tells Alice, ‘Yesterday I was lying.’ The unicorn replied, ‘So was I.’” Which day of the week is it? Find out the answer here.

This wonderful app has even enticed both of my children (middle school / high school age) to read almost every day solely for enjoyment purposes (one of which who professes to hate reading)! Both think it’s a treat to read the articles and if they miss a day, there is even more to read about later. WIN!!! Even younger readers may love this app with articles like “Dogs Have Music Preferences, And Most Like Reggae“. Give it a try! The Curiosity app is available for free in the following formats: Android appiOS app, Kindle app, or the web version.  I’m sure you’ll get hooked on it just like my family.

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The Curiosity app – for the “things that make you go hmmmm…” originally appeared on on May 31, 2017 at 8:00 am.

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BusyKid lets parents pay their child’s allowance with Apple stock


When I was a kid, I got a wallet-busting $5 a week allowance and I was lucky if there was anything left at the end of the week to put in my piggy bank for a rainy day. Now BusyKid is enabling parents to help their children earn money from chores that can be used to buy stocks, donate to charities, buy gift cards, or trade for cold hard cash. 

BusyKid charges a family $12 a year to use their service. It allows parents to choose from a large selection of predetermined chores (or create their own). When kids check in with the app to mark chores as completed, an SMS message will be sent to their parent to approve the payment for that chore.

On Friday/payday, kids can then use their earned allowance to buy fractional shares of real stocks which can increase or decrease in value as the market rises and falls. The child can even sell the stock with their parent’s approval and a $2.99 transaction fee.

If they don’t want to invest their allowance in stocks, they can donate it, exchange for gift cards or get cash.

 

Parents fund the BusyKid Account by linking to their checking account. The funds are held at a FDIC insured bank and are insured up to a balance of $250,000.

You can learn more about this automated allowance system at busykid.com.

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BusyKid lets parents pay their child’s allowance with Apple stock originally appeared on on May 5, 2017 at 10:32 am.

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WalletHub daily credit score Android app review

A good credit score is important if you need financing for a big ticket item like a home or car. If your financial health has been a little weak in the past and you’d like to keep an eye on it and even get tips on how to improve it, you need to check out WalletHub for Android.

What is it?

WalletHub is the first and only Android app that offers credit scores and full credit reports that are updated on a daily basis for free.

What can it do?

If you’ve heard that doing multiple credit checks can show up as a red flag when trying to get a loan, you won’t have to worry about that with WalletHub because it does “soft” inquiries that do not show up on your record.

Note: the screenshots in this review are from the app’s page on the Google Play Store. For security purposes, WalletHub will not allow you to take screenshots while in the app. So all the info in these screenshots is fake.

I installed the app, verified my identity, set up a PIN and was immediately shown my credit score. The app even show outstanding loans and balance amounts. I thought this was pretty cool because I wasn’t sure how much was left on my MINI Cooper car loan or the fact that my home loan is almost paid off.

You can view a history of your credit scores to see how you’ve improved (0r not) over time and will show you how you compare to others in the Americas, others in your state, others of your age and others in the same income bracket.

The app also provides tips that can help you improve your score, a list of past credit inquiries (it showed a hit from me from T-mobile last July when I bought a SIM to see if the coverage in my area had improved from the year before). It even provides a list of previous employers and past addresses.

Final thoughts

WalletHub is an easy to use and secure app that provides information that you can use to monitor your credit score all for free.

I really like this app. I like that I can easily keep an eye on my credit score without worrying about it showing up as a “hard” credit check. I installed it a few weeks ago just to try it and don’t have any plans to remove it.

Source: The app for this review is free from WalletHub. Please visit their site for more info and the Google Play store to download it.

 

Product Information

Price: Free
Manufacturer: WalletHub
Retailer: Google Play
Pros:
  • Free daily updated credit scores
  • Does not show up as a credit check
  • Shows outstanding loans and balances
Cons:
  • None

Filed in categories: Android, Reviews

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WalletHub daily credit score Android app review originally appeared on on March 17, 2017 at 2:18 pm.

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Developer with visual disability creates Big Keys iOS keyboard app with emojis

As I get older, I find that I often look over my glasses instead of through them because I’m at that glorious age when it’s tough to see small things like text on my phone without taking off my glasses first. Even though I wear bifocals, it’s sometimes really tough to see tiny things close up. It makes me wonder how people with real vision issues are able to enjoy using their smartphones and tablets without a lot of frustration.

One software developer, Hassan Hattab has taken matters into his own hands (eyes?) and created Big Keys, an iOS keyboard app that not only allows you to resize the characters for easier viewing, but the keyboard app also has emojis!

Accessibility is a big deal to the app founder, Hassan Hattab. He has a visual disability which contacts or glasses can’t fix. For years Hassan wanted to be able to see his keyboard better (and those emojis too!). He created this app to help himself, and many users in using and seeing their keyboards on their iPad and on the iPhone.

Big Keys Features:

Adjust the font size and emojis size on the keyboard.
Numeric Keypad for faster data entry.
Track the last pressed key.
Use gestures for faster typing.
Free selection of color combination to make it easier to see and work with the keys.

Check out the video:

You can read more about Big Keys at http://www.youapps.co/BigKeys and buy it for $2.99 through iTunes.

Filed in categories: iOS, News

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Developer with visual disability creates Big Keys iOS keyboard app with emojis originally appeared on on March 10, 2017 at 4:12 pm.

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AstroPad Studio iOS app review

From almost the very first day selling iPads, I was asked some version of this question: “Can I control my Mac with it?” Over the half-decade since the launch of the iPad, that answer has moved from “sorta” to “yes, and there are a few solutions, but they are really hinky” to, finally, “Yes. Full stop.” The final piece of the puzzle was a combo called AstroPad Studio. There’s an app for your iPad, and one for your Mac, and they sent us a license for the combo to test out. It was a lot of fun.

Note: Photos may be tapped or clicked for a larger image.

The install/download of the two pieces is easy enough – go to the app store for iOS and download. For the Mac app, you’ll need to visit astropad.com to download. There are two pricing plans: the Standard, one-time-pay version for $30, and the Studio version, with a subscription that costs $65/year or $8/month. The upgrade to Studio is significant. You not only get constant updates for free but priority support, Magic Gestures, Custom Pressure curves, the Eraser tool and a lot more. I’m going to concentrate the rest of the review on the Studio edition, but the Standard edition would be great for anyone who needs to use their Mac from their iPad occasionally for such things as file transfers, running programs that behave differently on a Mac than an iPad (*koff* WordPress’ *koff* arcane web client *koff*), or even Windows programs via Boot Camp/Parallels/Fusion. It’s truly a remote control of your Mac. But if you don’t need the pressure sensitivity pen input, or the “macro”-type feature of custom gestures, you’ll be OK with the Standard.


To set up, you simply launch each one from their respective machines, making sure you’re on the same wifi network. There’s a bit of handholding you have to do the first time, but every time after that, launching the Mac app gets you the “launch the app on your iPad” dialog box, (or launching the iPad version from your iPad and get the “Launch AstroPad on your Mac” dialog.) and you’re in business.

If there is a lot of traffic or spotty connectivity, you can actually connect your iPad directly with a USB cable, or manually tweak the connection, but I never had a problem. Besides using the setup at home for testing, I used the Mac/iPad Pro to present to a user group at a restaurant we frequent. Even on a different wifi network from my house, AstroPad studio reconnected without missing a beat.


Multiple monitors pose no special problem either. From within the Mac app, you can choose which monitor (or part of a monitor) will be viewed by the iPad. On the iPad, you have access to a wealth of controls: finger-gestures that give you control-click or option-click, quick switching between “draw” and “erase” if you’re using a drawing tool, etc. You can also choose to view the entire defined area or zoom into 100% for closer work. There is a toggle to allow you to virtually hold down modifier keys while clicking or drawing as well.


Much of the hype around AstroPad has been around getting the full version of Photoshop on the Mac (see photo above) with the control of the Apple Pencil, and I must say it was quite an effective combination, but you’re not limited to just drawing and editing. Any Mac app will work with Astropad, and Apple Pencil is quite a bit more accurate than a mouse.

I edited and uploaded the text and photos to this article from my MacBook through my iPad. The biggest issue was using the virtual keyboard: the spacebar doesn’t extend under the “M” key like on most keyboards because the designers made the inverted T arrow keys too large. I kept getting sentences with no spaces until I figured out what was going on. The other quibble was the keyboard hide button is on the bottom left. The iPad standard placement is bottom right, so, again, non-standard design fooled my muscle memory. But these irritations aside, it was pretty cool to export photos from Photos and have them be renamed to our standard convention, then drag them over to the upload area within Safari, and place them from my iPad. I imagine in the next decade or so, WordPress will actually have a touch interface for editing, but meanwhile, we have AstroPad!

Since I don’t have a drawing tablet for my Mac, this app combo saves me having to buy that, find space for it, and learn to use it. Drawing on one surface and having the resulting marks appear on another surface (the way a traditional drawing tablet works) is a bit unnatural, but with the iPad and Apple Pencil, it’s like having a touchscreen Mac with a drawing tablet on top. There is a product you can buy from Wacom called the Cintiq which gives you an actual monitor you can draw on digitally, but the cost is quite prohibitive. (The cheapest one on their site is $999 for a 13″ display.) If you have a Mac and an iPad, this software may be the solution to having to use such a display. Since I have a MacBookPro and a large display already, having a third monitor attached would prove awkward. Using my iPad Pro, however, is easy, because I can not only have it anywhere on my desk or lap but anywhere on the network. I can sit out on the deck using an iPad with the Mac still hooked up on the desk, and easily work on my Mac editing photos, or uploading photos from there to our web host, something that usually requires using my Mac. Well, I actually am using my Mac, but I’m touching my iPad. It’s getting pretty meta at this point….

Regarding subscriptions. If you are really needing Apple Pencil-quality input, and use Photoshop or other pen-based input on a regular basis, your investment in a pen-enabled display may be warranted. But, if you’re just trying things out, or you’re a student, or just dabble in fields where pen on Mac would be an upgrade, you can try Astropad Studio without a huge investment. And if you’re short on space, or want the flexibility that an iPad can give you artistically, this solution could really change your art. Give it a month or two, and see. That’s the beauty of subscriptions: you’re not having to pay a huge upfront fee, but you get all the benefits at once.

Source: The sample for this review was provided by Astropad, LLC. Please visit for more info.

 

Product Information

Price: Standard $30; Studio $65/year or $8/month subscription
Manufacturer: AstroPad, LLC
Requirements:
  • Mac, iPad, Wifi network or USB cable to connect devices
Pros:
  • Robust – setup once, and it just works
  • Works with any Mac app
  • Tiered pricing means you can pay when you use it
Cons:
  • Virtual Keyboard layout for iPad text entry is not standard, causes typos

Filed in categories: iOS, Reviews

Tagged:

AstroPad Studio iOS app review originally appeared on on March 8, 2017 at 9:58 am.

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