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Posts Tagged ‘android’

Bottle Rocket’s Laser Cats Live Wallpaper for Android Benefits Operation Kindness No-Kill Shelter

Tuesday, December 27th, 2011

Bottle Rocket Apps has released the Laser Cats Live Wallpaper app for Android phones and tablets.  Laser Cats Live Wallpaper combines the majesty of cats with the power of lasers in a way never seen before! Marvel as cats float across your device’s desktop, shooting lasers in response to your touches.

Laser Cats features many of the cats owned by the team members at Bottle Rocket Apps (www.bottlerocketapps.com), one of the world’s leading full-service mobile app development firms, focused on creating hand-crafted apps for the world’s most discriminating brands.  Exclusively for Android,  Laser Cats Live Wallpaper contains more than a dozen cats with unique laser colors, with biographies for each cat visible in the wallpaper settings. Tablet-optimized cats are included as well!

Laser Cats Live Wallpaper is available for $0.99 on the Android Market. Bottle Rocket Apps is donating 100% of the proceeds from the sale of this app to Operation Kindness, the oldest and largest no-kill, non-profit animal welfare organization in North Texas.  Operation Kindness is a nonprofit shelter that cares for homeless or unwanted cats and dogs in a no-kill environment. They never euthanize an animal to make room for another. They care for all the animals they take in until they are adopted. To learn more, visit www.operationkindness.org.

Liven up your Android desktop with Laser Cats, and help support a great cause at the same time!

Bottle Rocket Celebrates Three Years of Propelling the Mobile Market

Monday, March 7th, 2011

DALLAS (March 7, 2011) — Bottle Rocket Apps, one of the world’s leading full-service designers and developers of premium brand experience apps for the Apple iPhone, iPod touch and iPad, celebrates its third anniversary today. In just three years, Bottle Rocket has distinguished itself as the agency of choice for major companies seeking to create complex, hand-crafted, “never been done before” apps that will engage their customers and extend their brands.

Calvin Carter, president of Bottle Rocket, founded the company on March 7, 2008, literally the day after Apple CEO Steve Jobs announced that the company planned to open the iTunes App Store and the new iPhone 3G to third party apps. “I knew immediately that the iPhone would redefine the way we live our lives,” says Carter. “It was a game-changing platform that united information, instant access and unlimited range like no other tool in history.”

Realizing the new platform’s potential, however, required experimentation, innovation, careful design—and mistakes. Lots of them. “To learn quickly, we had to make our mistakes fast,” Carter says, “so rather than jumping directly into writing code, we began designing our apps with pencil sketches on graph paper. The ‘pencils’ were fast, inexpensive, and easy to erase and change. And they allowed us the creative space to explore unlimited new ways to make an app both intuitive and emotionally engaging.” The pencil sketch phase continues today as a hallmark of Bottle Rocket’s highly-regarded app strategy and design process.

By the end of 2008, Bottle Rocket had released nine iPhone apps—ranging from productivity tools to utilities to entertainment titles—while most developers had only managed to field one or two during the same period. “We wanted to send a clear message that Bottle Rocket had arrived. We weren’t just dipping out toe in the water. We were fully committed, regardless of the outcome,” says Carter.

The robustness and user-centered design of Bottle Rocket’s early apps got the company noticed by Apple—with which Bottle Rocket maintains a close business relationship to this day—and began to generate inquiries from prominent companies looking for apps of their own. Bottle Rocket’s first custom development client, early in 2009, was NPR. “We competed fiercely against eleven other capable developers to win NPR’s business,” Carter is quick to point out. “We were successful because we were truly passionate about the platform, approached the project as though it was our own app, spoke frankly and honestly with NPR, and worked tirelessly to develop something truly remarkable.” The resulting app, NPR News for iPhone, debuted in August 2009 and quickly became the top news app in the iTunes App Store, garnering praise from both critics and users.

The success of NPR News for iPhone brought Bottle Rocket new requests for custom app development, and the company quickly proved to the industry that it wasn’t a one-hit wonder. In late 2009 and 2010, ESPN, HD Radio, Disney, PBS, The Seattle Times, the National Science Foundation, SPIN Magazine, AARP, Discovery Channel, BET, Philips, American Express and more all selected Bottle Rocket over every other app developer to bring their brands to Apple’s mobile devices.

When Apple released the iPad on April 3, 2010, Bottle Rocket was ready with not just one, but four original apps designed specifically for the new tablet, including the award-winning NPR for iPad, one of the most popular iPad apps of all time. And later that year, Bottle Rocket brought its disciplined methodology to bear on Android devices as well, with several new custom apps for Android phones and tablets coming to the Android Market in the first half of 2011.

Today, users recognize that the “Developed by Bottle Rocket” label on an app means they are in for an experience of extraordinary quality and depth. Because of their popularity, innovation and user-centered design, Bottle Rocket’s custom creations quickly vault to prominence in the App Store, achieving rankings and accolades such as the #1 Free iPad App (Discovery Channel HD), #4 Entertainment App and Apple’s iPhone App of the Week (PBS for iPhone), #2 News App (NPR for iPad), #1 News App (NPR News for iPhone), #3 Music App (NPR Music), and #4 Business App (AMEX OPEN Forum).

As of its third birthday, Bottle Rocket has completed and delivered more than 50 premium apps, with almost 20 additional titles under development. The company is unique in that it continues to work its magic on its own apps, such as the wildly popular Doodle Bomb physics puzzle game (which reached the #1 Free iPhone App spot in 2010), alongside the blockbuster apps it crafts for its clients. “As we enter our fourth year in business, Bottle Rocket is ready for even more explosive growth,” says David Goldstein, Bottle Rocket’s director of business development. “We have barely begun to explore the potential for these exceptionally innovative mobile platforms. There’s a lot of history yet to be written in this industry, and we feel privileged to have a hand in writing it.”

Android Ecosystem – Honeycomb Tablets

Monday, February 28th, 2011

With the recent release of the Motorola Xoom, we wanted to add some more details about the state of Android currently. This past weekend, we experimented with the Xoom, and we can say that’s it’s by far the best Android tablet experience we’ve had.

With the recent release of the Motorola Xoom, Android has finally matured into the tablet space. Android 3.0 (also known as Honeycomb) has been designed with tablets in mind and takes advantage of the increased screen size to provide new experiences, while maintaining the Android ecosystem that millions have come to know and love. There have been several parts of the Android experience that have been modified for the tablet environment, including:

Bottom-Edge Status Bar
Found at the top of every Android phone, the Status Bar shows the time, your current network connection, and any notifications that you have outstanding. For tablets, this has been moved to the bottom of the screen and notifications have been made a much richer experience with larger graphics and more customizable text.

On-Screen Buttons for Home, Back and Multitasking
The basic navigation buttons provided on every phone are now made part of the bottom-edge status bar, leaving the front of the device without any hardware buttons at all. A new Multitasking button makes it easy to see which apps you’ve used recently, with thumbnails provided to make it even easier to spot the app you just left.

Context-Aware Action Bar
The top of the screen is still used on tablets, but now it provides actions based on your current activity. Removing the need for the menu button; this makes all interfaces more intuitive for the new tablet user.

Tablet Optimized Google Apps
Google has set the proper example by making it’s own apps look and function great on the tablet form factor. Apps can function differently based on orientation, taking advantage of real estate without making the screen feel crowded.

Clearly Google is taking the tablet market seriously with Android 3.0, and there are already more tablets announced for this year. The G-slate by LG will be coming to T-mobile’s 4G network later this year and it is certain many more will be announced in the next few months. So far no manufacturer has announced that they will be changing the standard Android 3.0 User Interface, which comes at a great relief to consumers and developers alike. This helps guarantee a consistent experience between tablets, and allows for updates to come quicker when newer versions of Android are released.

Other Recent Changes to Android
But tablets aren’t the only recent changes to Android. Google has also improved their Application delivery mechanism with some big improvements to the Android Market.  It’s now completely accessible through any web browser at http://market.android.com. Once an app is selected, it can be sent to your device from the browser, no cables required. And there are lots of new ways for publishers to engage consumers, with more screenshots, more descriptive text and even a link to a YouTube video. In-app purchase support has also been announced for apps, with an SDK coming soon.

NPR’s iPhone and iPad Apps, Developed by Bottle Rocket Apps, Win Advertising Age 2010 Media Vanguard Award

Friday, December 10th, 2010

Advertising Age recognized NPR’s news and music apps for iPhone and iPad, developed by Bottle Rocket Apps, with a 2010 Media Vanguard Award for Best Broadcaster iPhone/iPad/Android Apps. The MVAs, awarded this year for the first time, honor transformative, next-generation media products.

NPR’s news and music apps for iPhone and iPad, developed for NPR by Bottle Rocket Apps, have snagged recognition by Advertising Age with a 2010 Media Vanguard Award for the Best Broadcaster iPhone/iPad/Android Apps.

The award, announced at Advertising Age’s 2011 conference in New York, recognizes NPR’s reputation as a leading news and music source in the mobile media sector. Advertising Age created the Media Vanguard Awards to honor transformative, next-generation media. The awards, bestowed for the first time this year, drew hundreds of entries from major media companies (broadcasters, newspapers, magazines and digital natives) and marketers.

iPhone and iPad Apps Transform NPR’s Broadcast Business
A staggering 40% of NPR’s internet traffic can be traced back to its mobile platforms. Bottle Rocket partnered with NPR to provide strategic concept, user interface design and application development for NPR News for iPhone, NPR for iPad, and NPR Music for iPhone.

NPR’s apps craftily expand on their already thriving website, providing the end-user an interactive experience for consuming content and streaming associated stations. The NPR News for iPhone app, first launched in 2009, alone drives 20% of all NPR online pageviews and, according to Advertising Age, “provides a top-class experience” for users on the go. Advertising Age termed the sister NPR Music app, launched in the spring of 2010, a “runaway success”. That app offers an extensive library of music tracks and streaming audio, and allows users to customize their listening experiences with saved playlists.

When Apple launched the iPad this past April, Bottle Rocket enabled NPR to be “ready at the gate, offering a full-screen experience of everything it has to offer on the web, beautifully assembled for the tablet,” according to Advertising Age.

“NPR’s move to frontline the digital sphere with new concepts and technology-driven innovation has completely transformed the traditional consumer expectation of broadcast,” said Calvin Carter, president of Bottle Rocket Apps. “We are honored to have been NPR’s partner on the journey to winning this prestigious industry award,” he added.

iPhone Owners Download Twice As Many Paid Apps As Android Owners

Friday, July 9th, 2010

According to Business Insider, Apple iPhone owners are downloading nearly twice as many paid mobile applications as Google Android users.

Some reasons why users might download more iTunes paid apps could be:

  • iTunes has an easy purchasing system.
  • Popular paid apps are easily highlighted.
  • The iPhone is positioned as a premium phone so your users are more likely to be the type of user who buys paid apps.

Are there other reason you think people might be more willing to purchase paid apps from iPhone over Android?