An open demonstration of new apps for the iPhone moderated by Steven Levy, senior writer for Wired and author of The Perfect Thing, Hackers and more.
Michael Tchong, founder of Iconocast and MacWeek (now deceased), makes comments.
Bio
Stuart Dubey
Hailed by Pro Sound as one of the top ten most influential people in the Bay Area's audio post production industry, Emmy award winner Stuart Dubey has spent his life at the epicenter of sound innovation.
From penning his first love song at eleven years old, to launching cutting edge music studios in Los Angeles, to building DubeyTunes into one of San Francisco's premiere audio production facilities, Dubey has been at the forefront of the evolving world of sound-and-graphic delivery.
In addition to acting as CEO of DubeyTunes since 1995, Dubey has helped to build, manage and license several innovative audio technologies for leading media, internet and mobile companies. He has also served as a developmental beta consultant for Avid/Digidesign and has been featured in Mix, Shoot, Media, Cue and Post magazines as an audio innovator.
Steven Levy
Steven Levy has been covering the digital revolution for more than 25 years. Before joining WIRED in 2008, he was chief technology correspondent at Newsweek. He is the author of seven books, most recently the New York Times best seller In the Plex: How Google Thinks, Works, and Shapes Our Lives. Other books include Insanely Great, on the history of Apple's Macintosh computer, and Hackers, which was named the best tech book of the PC era by PC Magazine.
David A. Rowland
David Rowland is a web based developer. Rowland developed the Perfect Pitch and Blue Marble applications for the iPhone.
Web developer David Rowland demonstrates his iPhone app Blue Marble.
The app uses NASA photos and OpenGL technology to create an exact replica of the Earth and showcases the positions of the Sun and the Moon in relation to the users geolocation.
Application developer Stuart Dubey demonstrates BrainBaths, his latest iPhone app that uses holophonic sound to create a "sonic holograph" of soundtracks.
"This [app] turns your iPhone into a virtual brain spa," says Dubey.