The free version gives you a standard voice message, but if you get lots of voicemail, consider upgrading to the Pro version. Then you can click the + in the top right corner and create and save new greetings. You can choose which greeting (from ten) is active in advance with a tick, so you can make one greeting for meetings, one for driving - whatever your recurring activities require. For example, you could have one suggesting calling someone else in your organisation, since you're doing this or that.
The Pro version incurs a monthly charge of NZ$2.59, or NZ$24.99 yearly from the app's Settings page. This is charged through your iTunes account. Some people will find this service indispensable for this minimal outlay.
When you have selected an individual message from the inbox, the play screen has a share icon at top right. One of the share features is the ability to send a message to a contact via email.
Touch Voicemail relies on 'Unconditional Call Forwarding', a service supported here by Vodafone, Telecom and 2Degrees (check, if on PrePay, that your particular PrePay has this option, or it won't work).
Bridge Point's Ben Wilson told me the little company is excited about the changes Apple is bringing in with iOS 8, and that feedback from early users has been vital, but Bridge Point is taking a leaf out of Apple's books and working to make the app better in itself, only considering adding features they think most users would use. Uptakes amongst tradespeople and sales staff has been particularly strong.
More information at touchvoicemail.com
Syncrasy
AUT's Creative Technologies' wunderkind Judi Klein has finished her app work. The young Auckland has been completing the final component of her masters degree, culminating in a demonstration of the iPad app she created.
The resulting app, Syncrasy, will not be available on the App Store until later in the year. It was designed in light of educational technology research combined with software development. Judit's research aimed to bridge the disconnect between the two perspectives by looking at the software development process as an influential factor on the use of mobile devices in tertiary education.
The app itself is innovative - it enables real time collaboration between iOS users based on their location and proximity. The dynamic nature of the interaction means that a shared canvas, built up from images and text contributed by multiple users, exists only while the participants are within a certain distance of each other. It adds in the content of new participants who join the space, and removes the content of those who leave.
Clever, huh? And offering some exciting real-world possibilities in education and the workplace.
Sleep better
Auckland doctor Chen Luo is one of a 'bunch of doctors' (GP, sleep specialist and psychiatrist) developing an app to help people with insomnia (sleeping problems) without any pills. It's aiming to be dead easy to use and it's being designed to tap into Apple's forthcoming HealthKit APIs. Sleepine aims to be cheaper, faster and easier to use than other initiatives.
A pilot clinical trial run by the group showed 70 per cent of patients improved with the face-to-face version of the Sleepine therapy they developed.
If anyone, is interested in insomnia or is interested in taking part in the study, please visit the quick 10-question questionnaire here, or contact them directly be email at hi@sleepine.com.
This is the second to last Apple Watch on the Herald. I would love to continue to write about NZ ventures, developers and initiatives on my mac-nz.com site, since I have plans to move Apple Watch elsewhere, so please email me at mac.nz@mac.com.