Habits reviewed in Macworld
Habits by Louis Franco helps users form good habits, which sounds simple enough. But developing habits requires a bit of time and discipline. It requires repetition and awareness. Habits keeps your calendar free from clutter associated with routine tasks or the general stuff of life.
Habits on Sale for $0.99 until the end of January
I am working on version 1.1, and I will post it at the end of January and return it to its old price. Until then, here's hoping that you're able to turn your resolutions into habits.
(The AppStore takes time to fully update -- please make sure it says that the price is $0.99 before you buy)
Buy Habits on the App Store
O'Reilly's iPhone AppStore Answers
The other major improvement is dropping the NDA for released SDK's, thus opening up the possibility of books, online tutorials and blogging about iPhone development.Changes have been relatively slow to come to the App Store. However, with the addition of review copies, as well as limiting ratings to those who've purchased applications, Apple has made changes that have been welcomed by developers. I'm hopeful that the App Store will continue to improve over time and address additional issues.
More interesting iPhone pricing articles
And, here's another iPhone app pricing article I got from John Gruber's DaringFireball. In the article, Peter Cooper uses popularity as a stand-in for units sold and and tries to figure out which apps have the most revenue. Put this one in your RSS feed if you are interested in hearing more as this installment covers mostly the Games category.Having more than doubled over the last two months, Gaming remains the largest category accounting for a quarter of all apps. The fastest growing categories were Education and Lifestyle. Medical is the newest app category and as of the end of November there were over 80 medical apps, the 10 most popular of which were free. Among Game apps, Racing, Music, and Sports were the fastest growing Game sub categories.
