iPad App Review: Snapseed | AppsJam – iPhone, iPad, Android App …

Nik Software has created this iPad application to allow its users to adjust, transform, enhance and share their photos with absolute ease and simplicity – therefore making it one of the most popular iPad apps on the market …

Shoebox For iPhone: Scan, Organize and Share Old Paper Photos

Shoebox lets you share all those old memories Despite its truly awful camera, the iPad 2 is what I take most of my photos with these days. Why? Because the photos are easy to share, and easy for me to browse and play around with. And Shoebox is an app that will help you to do that with all your old paper photos

Google Plus Adds Powerful Photo Edit Suite. Free

Google Plus has just added some pretty impressive editing tools. Photo Charlie Sorrel Google Plus has added Instagram-like controls to its photo section. The service has always had basic editing, and because Google Plus shares its photo albums with Picasa any edits made there would propagate back from there. But building them in makes things so much easier

Nikon iPhone App Streams Photos, Documents to COOLPIX Projector

The only way to make Nikon’s app uglier is to view it pixel-doubled in an iPad screen Nikon has released a handy little app, although its audience will likely be pretty limited — you need to own an iOS device and also the projector-equipped Nikon COOLPIX S1200pj camera. And even then you may want to hold off this free app, thanks to its horrible design. iP-PJ Transfer — which sounds like something copyright lawyers might do at a sleepover — lets you use the camera’s projector to show content stored on your iPhone. Use it to project slideshows and documents, and also browse to any site using the built-in web browser. The camera is connected to the iPhone using the Dock Connector cable that came with the camera (and if you don’t have one, then tough — Nikon doesn’t sell them separately)

Facebook For iPad: Key Screens, First Impressions

> For anyone suffering from the visual overload of Facebook’s web iteration — rife with font chaos and real-time Ticker updates that transform our “friends” into agents of distraction — the new Facebook app for iPad offers immediate relief. Our gut first impression?

What’s Inside: The iPhone 4S Camera

One of the biggest improvements to the iPhone 4S looks to be the camera Apple may have added three more megapixels to the iPhone’s camera, but that’s just about the least interesting, and certainly the least important part of the 4S camera upgrade. The big news is threefold.

Purported Pic of iPhone 5 Back Cover Surfaces

This could be the back of Apple’s upcoming iPhone 5. Source: MacPost.net The iPhone 5 may not look all that different from its predecessor, the iPhone 4. What is said to be a photo of an iPhone 5’s back cover has emerged, and it features a model number widely believed to be associated with the next generation Apple smartphone. The image, first published by MacPost, shows a white iPhone back styled much like the iPhone 4 .

Photo Stats Turns iPhone EXIF Data into Beautiful Infographics

Photo Stats makes sense of the metadata in your iPhone photos Photo Stats is an iPhone app that neither edits your photos nor organizes them. Instead, it makes cool infographics that let you know a lot more about your photos. You all know about EXIF metadata, but I bet that the only time you ever look at it is to quickly check which camera or lens you or another photographer used, or to find out if such a noise-free picture was really taken at ISO 3200. Photo Stats makes that info a lot more friendly.

MiniDock Turns iPhone Charger into Tiny, Wall-Mounted Dock

Bluelounge’s MiniDock is a tiny L-shaped adapter that turns your existing iPhone or iPad charger into a plug-mounted iPhone stand. It lets you charge your iPhone or iPod in any socket you like, without having to leave it laying vulnerable on the floor. The MiniDock plugs straight onto the USB port of the Apple adapter you already have, and offers up a 30-pin dock connector and a nice, laid-back cradle for the iDevice. It also comes with three spacers of different thicknesses so that back of the device has something to lean against, whether it’s a skinny iPod touch, a thick iPhone 4 in a case or a teeny little Nano

ICam Concept Lets iPhone Control Camera’s Brains

ICam lets the iPhone hook directly into a real camera Finally, somebody has invented the camera I have always wanted. Or at least, Turkish designer Zeki Özek has invented the camera tech I have always wanted. Ozek’s iCam is a way to integrate your iPhone with a proper camera. The camera would have a cutout in the back into which the phone slots, hooking into the camera’s brain via the familiar 30-pin dock connector. The phone’s screen takes the place of a dedicated LCD, and photos are recorded direct to the iPhone’s internal storage. Thus, the camera is downgraded to a dumb, light-processing terminal.