It's a genuine sandbox, with careful touchscreen controls allied to a host of items, characters and scenery with which to piece together your mini epics. Createrria is an app for creating and sharing your own games, from puzzles to platformers. Is this an app or a game? It's certainly rather marvellous. This virtual version lets you pluck at 15 strings with a variety of sounds, then share your Spockish compositions on SoundCloud. Well, the first official Vulcan Harp, anyway: developer Shiverware says this is fully licensed from CBS Studios. Fast forward five years, and here's the first Vulcan Harp for iOS. In the earliest days of the App Store, a digital lightsaber app was all the rage. The app version can be used to order and watch video messages, with a Kids section containing an advent calendar, countdown and map radar to pinpoint Santa's home. The Portable North Pole website has quietly become a rather big deal for many parents, who are ordering bespoke video messages for their children from Father Christmas – often (I suspect) in a last-ditch attempt to encourage good behaviour in the final two weeks before Christmas. iPhone / iPad PNP - Portable North Pole 2013 (£2.49) Everything can be tagged and synchronised with other iOS devices and Macs, with plans for more (premium) features in the months ahead. It's a way to organise your images, including photos, screenshots and pictures you've seen on the web. More mobile image organising with Ember, launched by the developer behind slick to-do list app Clear. iPhone Ember - Capture, Organize and Share (Free) It's also capable of serving all this stuff up again when you return to the same place, as an aide-memoire. The app stores your photos and videos while pulling in your location data to show where they were taken, offering a choice of layouts to organise everything. iPad Heyday (Free)Īpple is throwing its App Store marketing weight behind Heyday this week: an app promising "effortless journaling". But its appeal is just as much about the educational games that go with them, aiming to help children learn as well as watch. Hopster is a UK-based rival that is well worth a look from parents, offering a catalogue of TV shows including Ben & Holly's Little Kingdom, Paddington Bear and 64 Zoo Lane. A growing number of companies have ambitions to be "the Netflix for kids", including Netflix itself.
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