Blog


Checking in From Austin

March 14th, 2010 by Jeff

Day 3 of South by Southwest Interactive was a huge improvement over Day 2. Perhaps we just did a better job picking talks/panels, but we left each feeling like we learned something useful.

Started the morning at “Beyond LAMP: Scaling Websites Past MySQL”.  Panelists included Christopher Slowe of Reddit, Serkan Piantino of Facebook, and Kevin Weil of Twitter.  It was interesting to see their respective speed optimization strategies.  Notes here.

Next we headed to “Gaming the Crowd: Turning Work Into Play” with Andy Baio of Kickstarter.com. This guy was an awesome presenter: funny, engaging, and informative. Basically he discussed how principles of game play can be used to help solve real-world problems. I can see these ideas being used to take our test prep and brain health apps to the next level.

Lastly, we sat in on a great talk titled “Persuasive Design: Encouraging Your Users to Do What You Want Them To” with Andy Budd of ClearLeft. His principles seem like common sense after you hear them, but it’s amazing how pervasively they’re used by marketers and designers.

If you want to see what we’re up to at SXSW, check out our Twitter feed - we’ll be updating it live.

Kaplan Step 1 Qbank

March 11th, 2010 by Jeff

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We’re back with another game-changing test prep app for the iPhone.  This time we worked with Kaplan Medical to create a mobile version of their online Qbank product for the USMLE Step 1 (a medical licensing exam).   It took some effort to cram all the functionality of Qbank into a tiny iPhone, but we’re quite pleased with the result.  Hopefully having access to Qbank on the go will help our friends in med school get some much-needed sleep.

Did we mention that Kaplan Step 1 Qbank is free?  Also you get a 25% discount off the full online Qbank when you download the app!

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Faces and Names

January 23rd, 2010 by Jeff

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Surprise!  We’re actually posting a timely entry on the blog.  Check out e-Faces and Names, our latest app for the iPhone.  It’s a memory game which requires you to remember names and occupations for faces shown in the game.

e-Faces is the third app we’ve developed for our good friends at MyBrainSolutions.com.  There’s more games to come in the near future, including versions for BlackBerry.  Special thanks to Jeff Garneau for another great effort.app_store_badge_en

Catch the Feeling

January 22nd, 2010 by Jeff

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Check out one of our newest apps for the iPhone, e-Catch the Feeling.  It’s a health and wellness game which helps improve your mood - the goal is to quickly pop bubbles containing positive words while ignoring the negative words.  It’s surprisingly fun and gets quite challenging by the end.

e-Catch has actually been in the App Store for a couple months, but as usual we’ve been too busy with other projects to blog it.  It’s the second app we’ve developed for MyBrainSolutions.com and our first game on the iPhone.  Special thanks to lead developer Jeff Garneau for his hard work on the project.
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Breathing… There’s an App for That

November 23rd, 2009 by Jeff

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Although we released the MyCalmBeat app for iPhone over a month ago, we never got around to blogging it.   A few days ago version 1.1 was approved into the App Store.  It provides the usual bug fixes and UI improvements, and adds much-requested audio cues so you don’t need to watch the breathing bar to stay on pace with your optimal breathing rate.

If you haven’t tried it yet, MyCalmBeat is one of the many online brain health training solutions offered by MyBrainSolutions (the first to go mobile - we’re working on more).  Basically it helps you lower your stress and become more resilient to anxiety-inducing situations by training you to maximize your heart rate variability.  You can read more about the science here.

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Apple Showin’ Some Love

October 15th, 2009 by Jeff
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Nice!  What’s Invasive is listed as a Staff Favorite in the iTunes App Store.  I guess that means we’ll have to bite our tongues the next time we get an App Store rejection.

In case you missed it, our What’s Invasive iPhone app was released to the public last week.  If you live near Los Angeles and enjoy the outdoors it’s a must-download.  Also it looks like we’ll be working on a nationwide version of  What’s Invasive, so watch for that.

Helping Out the Ecologists

October 6th, 2009 by Sasank

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It’s been a while since we’ve posted on the blog, but we’ve been really busy with a few interesting projects.  One of them, “What’s Invasive”, has just been released in the App Store after a lengthy review from Apple.  In collaboration with CENS and the Santa Monica Mountains National Reserve, we created an iPhone app that enables visitors to easily document invasive plants in the park.  The geo-tagged photos captured by users go directly to the invasive plant management group at the park so it can decide how to best handle the infestation.  The mapped data is also available to the public.  Also, check out the press our beta version got in National Geographic.

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Big in Japan

June 23rd, 2009 by Jeff
The man in action.

The man in action.

Congratulations to Sasank for winning the Best Paper award at the 4th International Symposium on Location and Context Awareness (LoCA) in Tokyo, Japan.  Sasank presented his recent acadmic work, “Using Context Annotated Mobility Profiles to Recruit Data Collectors in Participatory Sensing” [pdf].  Sounds like a mouthful, but it’s really quite interesting stuff.

Thoughts on the Palm Pre

June 15th, 2009 by Christian
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Opened Pre showing off the Keyboard

I managed to get my hands on a Palm Pre bright and early on release day, June 6th. It was easy to pick up and the line wasn’t very long, though they seem to be selling pretty well. So now, with phone in hand, I can offer a few thoughts on some aspects of this new smart phone challenger. Read the rest of this entry »

To the Cloud!

June 15th, 2009 by Sasank

This past week I’ve been playing with Google AppEngine for a research project (SenseTheBeach).  So far, developing with AppEngine has been interesting (in a good way).   The platform enables you to run web applications on Google’s infrastructure - allowing you to scale easily. But in exchange for this scalability, Google has some restrictions on how your application can operate.

First, all “web” requests need to respond within 30 seconds.  So you can’t do something crazy like image processing or intense processing.  Instead, you should do your processing in the background through task queues (smart cron jobs) and have responses to web requests pre-processed.  Also, all external requests (emails, url fetch requests, etc…) need to be 1 MB or less.  This makes you strive for compression when dealing with communicating to an outside entity.  Finally, everything (processing, bandwidth, number of requests) counts towards your quota.  Of course you can pay to increase your quota, but at TakeFive, we like to be “efficient,”  so things like saving to a memory cache and then creating processes to eventually store aggregates to a database is the way to go.

Anyway when I first approached developing on the cloud, I thought I could do whatever I wanted and it would just work.  But actually it’s forcing me to be smart - which is a good thing.