Bills v1.1 coming soon, many fixes and a new "Stats" section. UPDATE: Released.

4. March 2010 22:23 by Dominik Balogh

Bills v1.1 is going to be submitted to Apple shortly, check out the screenshots below from the new "Stats" section. Of course, many fixes are included in this release, including the revamped AutoPay feature. You can finally turn it off for repeating bills so they can become overdue. More informations will be included in the release log.

UPDATE: 1.1 is out, release log now available below.

Please consider rating our application or updating your AppStore review if you like this update. Thank you very much.

NEW FEATURES:

  • AutoPay can now be turned off for repeating bills so they can become overdue.
  • New Stats/Totals section, summarizing bills by custom date range, currency and categories.
  • Repeating cycles increased to 99 repeats.
  • Pre-alert range increased to 30 days.

FIXES:

  • Fixed: Slightly incorrect regional formats for Canadian Dollars (CAD) and British Pounds (GBP).
  • Fixed: Korean Wons (KRW) currency symbol.
  • Fixed: Bug with a '&' character in the category name.
  • Fixed: Support for non-full hour time zones and their respective UTC offsets.
  • Fixed: Some Calendar bugs when re-saving non-repeating bills as repeating ones.
  • Fixed: Some other UI bugs in Calendar.
  • Fixed: Creating new bills with a close due date in the web access.
  • Fixed: If Manual syncing is used, network connection availability warning will not show up anymore.

IMPORTANT NOTES:

  • Please enable and disable an Airplane mode after updating to prevent problems with Push notifications.
  • Please disable AutoPay on all previous repeating bills manually if don't wish them to be automatically marked as paid on their due dates.

Bills on your table - seeking testers for a private beta test

3. January 2010 22:43 by Dominik Balogh

UPDATE: We've received a lot of inquiries, private beta team is now closed for new members, thank you!

We've been very busy over the last few months working on our new application called "Bills ~ on your table". Bills allows you to track your bills so you'll never forget again to pay them on time. Most of us are too lazy to use budget and expenses tracking applications daily, but nobody should forget to pay important bills. Bills on your table works on any iPhone or iPod touch. It's one of the very few apps that supports 170 (meaning virtually all) currencies and currency formats around the world. It's also possible to add the bills via web access. Push notifications support is included, of course.

Well, Bills is finished and since it's almost impossible to deliver a glitch-free piece of software in the first run, we are seeking about 40 testers to help us find bugs in real-life usage. If you already are a member of our private beta team from testing NotifyMe, you don't need to apply again, we haven't forgotten about you! As a side note, the good thing for NotifyMe users is that most of the server core from Bills will be shared with NotifyMe 2 (custom snoozing patterns, custom categories, etc.) and that's why we have delayed the update. More on that later though.

Everybody who is willing to help us with finding bugs in Bills, please e-mail us at info@powerybase.com with the subject Bills betatest. Please include the following informations:

  • Your iPhone/iPod touch UDID
  • Your iPhone/iPod touch model
  • Firmware version
  • Twitter handle (if you own one)
  • Your name
  • Your location (country)

Enough talk, let's take a look at how Bills looks on the screenshots below.

If you're interested, please let us know. Thank you!

Bills for iPhone Bills for iPhone Bills for iPhone Bills for iPhone Bills for iPhone Bills for iPhone Bills for iPhone Bills for iPhone Bills for iPhone Bills for iPhone

Review your reminders - prepare for the switch from DST to Standard Time, 2009

22. October 2009 21:06 by Dominik Balogh

Important news to all NotifyMe users - please be aware that Daylight Saving Time (also known as Summer Time) ends in a few days in most parts of the world.

Standard Time begins as follows:

  • On 25th October in all west & central European countries (clock falls back to Standard Time from 3:00 to 2:00)
  • On 25th October in United Kingdom, Ireland and Portugal (clock falls back to Standard Time from 2:00 AM to 1:00 AM)
  • On 1st November in USA and Canada (clock falls back to Standard Time from 2:00 AM to 1:00 AM)
  • Australia has switched vice-versa from ST to DST on 4th October

If you are located in any of these countries or any other country which is still using Summer Time at the moment, your iPhone will switch to Standard Time automatically (assuming your region is set correctly in your iPhone settings). Please revise your existing reminders immediately the following morning and change their trigger times accordingly.

Which reminders are affected?

Luckily, (or unfortunately, depending on your usage) not all reminders are affected by the time shift. The following reminders will be received 1 hour earlier after the switch:

  1. All reminders created in NotifyMe Web access during Summer Time with the future date of Standard Time
  2. Recurring reminders (daily/weekly/every two weeks/monthly). Yearly repeated reminders are not affected.

If you've never used NotifyMe Web access, only mentioned recurring reminders should be delivered 1 hour earlier than before.

How to fix recurring reminders?

After the time transition, please edit your recurring reminders and set their trigger date to any date which is after the transition.

We're sorry for the inconvenience. Please note that we're already working on a seamless future transitions, so you won't have to worry about the time shift again in March 2010. Don't hesitate to contact us if you need further assistance.

NotifyMe 1.4 now available on time-limited sale for $1,99 (50% off)!

23. September 2009 00:49 by Dominik Balogh
NotifyMe sale icon

UPDATE: The sale is now over.

NotifyMe update 1.4 was a little delayed because we had to cancel an already approved submission, but thankfully, Apple representative contacted us by phone and the review was expedited. We've listened to users and included some of the most requested features. We're also rolling out this update together with a time-limited sale, so now you can get NotifyMe for half of the regular price!

The improvements and new features in NotifyMe 1.4 are as follows:

  • 8 new cute alert sounds to choose from
  • Note for each reminder (scroll down the New reminder screen to type a note)
  • Background initializing on startup, no more blue dialog with a spinning wheel
  • Even faster startup thanks to more optimizations and dropping the dialog "framework"

During the initial background initialization, NotifyMe is in read-only mode for added reliability. As soon as Push initialization process is finished (usually within 2 seconds), you're automatically able to edit, save or remove any of reminders. Of course, the most important thing on background initializing is that you can actually start typing or navigate around the application without having to wait. Don't forget to try it and also check other new features.

If you haven't already bought NotifyMe, it's the best time to buy it now for $1,99 before the price goes up!

iTunes 9 interface and a 20% sales drop (updated)

11. September 2009 12:10 by Dominik Balogh

Criticizing App Store interface and inconsistent approval processes is already getting to the point where even enthusiastic readers start to get bored by reading about it. It's also kind of embarassing for the developers, because Apple is our sales agent, our business partner who even made this business possible and all we have to say is "Apple, that really sucks!" repeatedly. We are pretty happy with our sales, our first application has been picked into Staff Favorites worldwide, we've been topping the Productivity chart for some time and aiming to top it again. There are many ways to successfully market the application. But the latest interface changes in iTunes 9 feels like Apple didn't get it right at all, even if Phil Schiller sounded like they are going to, at last.

Since iTunes 9 came out on 9th September (until 09/13), we are seeing a 20% - 30% hourly sales drop ands it's becoming slightly worse as more users are upgrading to the new version. More developers are reporting similiar, see here or here.

Here's why we think it happens.

New navigation and categories

From the accessibility point of view, the new navigation bar now allows users to jump from anywhere to anywhere within second. But what about those tiny little arrows on the right of each button? Arrows designed this particular way are very non-standard for web design and navigation. These arrows are actually independant buttons themselves while looking like a part of the whole button. Standard behavior in this case (when an arrow appears on mouse-over) is to show a contextual menu when user clicks anywhere on the area of the button. In iTunes 9, arrows are different buttons and they have their own hover state. You have to click that exact 15x15 px arrow area. If you look at all other buttons on the App Store with such arrows, they're clearly split away as a different button for safety and for users to easily understand.

iTunes 9 arrow-buttons

Why is the new navigation bar an issue?

There is no other way to access App Store categories than by clicking the arrow. With 100 million credit card accounts on iTunes and 50 million iPhone+iPod touch users in total, there's a high probability that even our grandparents use iTunes. The "average Joe" may not be aware that the 15 px arrow opens a separate menu for categorized applications which may interest him.

Even bigger issue in other 54 countries?

In 23 countries where iTunes Music Store is available, there are eight main sections in the top navigation bar. We can presume that even our Joe finally figures it out at some point sooner or later, mainly thanks to hover effects when moving the cursor around. But in the other 54 countries where only App Store and iTunes U are available, the navigation bar is significantly cheaper. There's much less probability that users from these markets navigate around using this bar (and notice the arrow), since only App Store is used basically all of the time. For example, on Brazil store, the "home" is actually the App Store homepage and the "App Store" button is the same. The arrow appears on mouse-over, but users don't have many reasons to discover this navigation bar immediately.

iTunes 9 navigation toolbars comparison

In the old interface, there was a sidebar with categories grabbing visitors' attention. More pageviews in separate categories force developers to compete against each other. Topping the particular category makes the application more visible not for regular visitors only, but mainly for the media. Recent improved keyword searching is certainly not a compensation for this situation, since it's very likely that users don't even know what they want until they see it. That's what Apple has been doing with their products since Steve Jobs had a personal computer idea -- introducing products which people never thought about before. Hiding the categories into a 15 px contextual arrow may cause that small interesting applications get lost even more than before, because they're less visible and individual categories are getting less pageviews.

No more sub-categories for games

Interested in shooting action games or puzzle games only? There's no way to filter these games now -- there's only a single "Games" category. A lot of good games may get lost even more now. Again, people don't know what they would like to play until they see it by browsing around.

Tight grid design

If you've been clicking around already, you've also noticed that all "TOP" grids are now based on big icons with less text in a tight grid. There's less space for text or descriptions and text is trimmed to about 20 characters. Wouldn't it be better to create a more spacier grid with a short description for each application, each application under the next one? It's a known fact that people buy products by packaging design when looking at the store shelf -- people don't read descriptions that much. Is Apple's approach the same in the long term? Is a grocery shop experience better than Amazon-type experience?

Mouse-over to compare.

iTunes 9 navigation toolbars comparison

Force for change

It seems that Apple is using interface design as a force for developers to create beatiful packagings (icons) which are recognizable and stand out. Apple forces the developers to cut the long names with descriptions and use keywords instead. Apple also forces developers to not undervalue the store with $0,99 approach, but rather think of a "sweet-spot" price point to get quality apps into "TOP 200 Grossing" list. Sounds very clever at this point. Genius is also a great idea -- let's pretend that Genius will indeed become much better after some time.

But why hide the categories, completely disable sub-categories and somehow make the developers focus only on getting into that TOP 200 grossing? That's not what the developers have been suggesting for the last year with gross charts. Why there are no TOP grossing inside categories as well? Users may get used to the new navigation bar and categories overtime, just as they pass the treshold of the learning curve. But why the aggresive tradeoff? How did sub-categories break the force approach, especially?

iTunes 9 App Store interface with inconsistent design across pages feels more like a "public beta" in which Apple didn't have enough time to finish it because of September Music Event deadline. The interface is raising questions and it will most probably drop the sales for many applications. Patches and improvements like Genius, TOP Grossing, new index page with better Staff/Noteworthy sections may indeed help, but considering the mentioned glitches and tradeoffs, there still seems to be a long way ahead. We're not sure if iTunes 9 shortened it.

UPDATE: After three weeks of iTunes 9 availability, I can happily report that sales are getting to their original levels. As we've predicted, it seems that users eventually got used to the new interface and new navigation bar.