iPhone App Ideas

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Applications usually don’t invoke a wide range of emotions other than anger and occasionally, satisfaction. For my human-computer interaction class, during the first week, we had to brainstorm ideas for apps. I focused (partially) on the subset of applications that I call “emotional apps” (”happy apps” might fit pretty well too). These are apps that you wouldn’t normally term useful, but they are worthing working on because they make people smile. The simplest example of something with indirect emotional impact would be Skype, which helps friends and family talk to each other from anywhere in the world. But I’m more interested in the small set of applications that directly evoke joy or sadness or nostalgia in people. Take a look at the “I am T-Pain” iPhone app. It transforms your voice into an auto-tuned or pitch-corrected form, which has the effect of making you sing even when you are just talking into it. So when people first use the application, they almost always laugh (as seen on this YouTube video). As a creator, there’s nothing that makes me happier than making someone smile or laugh. One comment on this story about that iPhone app expresses my thoughts well:

I really liked watching how happy everyone was when they were using the demo. They were all so immediately impressed and inspired. I think you nailed it. How rare is it that software actually makes people happy? This app is great.

The iPhone is the most beautiful device created in human history. It’s just a small slab of metal but because it has so many different sensors, it can be anything you want it to be. Unlike a laptop or desktop, you can feel the iPhone, you can blow into it and you can touch it. It’s perfect for creating the most amazing emotional apps that we want to create. Here are some of my ideas, ordered roughly by how much I like the idea:

  • How do we create intimacy between people despite distance? An iPhone app that would let you tap your phone every time you think of someone and then, you say what made you think of them. The other person would know immediately that you thought of them when you saw, say, “dandelions floating in the gentle breeze”. At the end of the day or week, you can recollect all the love in the world. Everyone I told this idea to (just the idea!) inevitably smiled.

  • How do we kiss people who are not near us? In this app, you kiss your iPod/iPhone, the exact imprint of the kiss and the sound of the kiss is then sent immediately to who you want to kiss. Scott Klemmer, the professor for the class, mentioned exactly such an prototype in a later lecture.

  • How do we remember all the coffee we have ever had in our lives? You take pictures of every coffee you drink. Based on the color of their coffee, the app can tell what kind of coffee it is. And there will be a coffee stats page that helps you remember your every experience of drinking coffee.

  • How do we overcome nervousness? The app would include a nervousness detector, which would work based on how much your hands are shaking and how hot your hands feel on the iPhone. Then, it would give out instructions for exercises such as relaxed breathing to help people calm themselves. “Take a deep breath now”.

  • How do we help people performs random acts of kindness every day? An app that poses interesting daily challenges such as “hug a stranger” or “pay for the car behind you at the toll booth”.

Other non-emotional ideas:

  • How do we help men observe proper urinal etiquette? In this iPhone app, when you walk into a restroom, you take a picture of the urinals. Then, based on the International Choice of Urinal Protocol and accounting for urinal protocol vulnerability, the app will tell you which urinal is the right one to use. Obviously, there are potential legal issues with this app.

  • How do we prevent people from overdrinking? The app would have a drink tracker that you tap every time you have a drink (or better yet, you get someone else to keep track of it for you). When you have had more than your limit, the iPhone starts making horrible loud noises, vibrating awkwardly and in general, making you feel socially unacceptable (another possibility here is to make use of the brown note). And if you’re too drunk, there’s an emergency number that you can call with one tap.

If anyone’s interested in working on any of these ideas, go ahead and do it, or email me to talk about it.

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