FiveYearsOld

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  • Apple celebrates 5 years of the App Store

    by 
    Kelly Hodgkins
    Kelly Hodgkins
    07.08.2013

    The App Store is about to turn 5 years old, and Apple is kicking off a new promotion to celebrate this milestone. Earlier today, we noticed the prices on several popular apps dropped to free and thought Apple has something up its sleeve. Now that sale has been made official with a new "5 Years of the App Store" promotional page in the iTunes App Store. Apple's latest sale features "five landmark games and five groundbreaking apps" that defined the App Store over the past several years. The list of apps now available for free include: iOS Apps Barefoot World Atlas [iOS Universal; Category: Reference; Now free, down from $4.99] Barefoot World Atlas is a magical interactive 3D globe that invites children to explore the regions and countries of the world, discovering hundreds of fascinating features and immersing themselves in the rich wonders of our planet. Over [iOS Universal; Category: Photography & Video; Now free, down from $1.99] Add beautiful text and artwork to your photos and share them on Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr and Instagram. Day One (Journal/Diary) [iOS Universal; Category: Lifestyle; Now free, down from $4.99] A new way to journal. Enter your memories, ideas, events and photos to have them synced to your iPhone and iPad using iCloud or Dropbox. Traktor DJ for iPhone [iPhone; Category: Music; Now free, down from $4.99] The world's #1 pro DJ software brings high-impact DJing to iPhone. Touch your tracks and create stunning mixes in seconds. How To Cook Everything [iOS Universal; Category: Food & Drink; Now free, down from $9.99] This first-of-its-kind app of the bestselling cookbook How to Cook Everything from New York Times columnist Mark Bittman has 2,000 recipes, 400 how-to illustrations and a host of features that appeal to cooks on the go. iOS Games Superbrothers: Sword and Sworcery EP [iOS Universal; Category: Games; Now free, down from $4.99] Superbrothers: Sword & Sworcery EP is an exploratory action adventure with an emphasis on audiovisual style. Traverse a mythic little realm, use a sword to do battle and evoke sworcery to solve mystical musical mysteries. Badland [iOS Universal; Category: Games; Now free, down from $3.99] Badland is an award-winning atmospheric sidescrolling action-adventure platformer taking place in a gorgeous forest full of various inhabitants, trees and flowers. Where's My Water? [iOS Universal; Category: Games; Now free, down from $0.99] Help Swampy by guiding water to his broken shower. Each level is a challenging physics-based puzzle with amazing life-like mechanics. Infinity Blade II [iOS Universal; Category: Games; Now free, down from $6.99] The continuing journey of young Siris unfolds as you delve deeper into the world of the Deathless tyrants and their legion of Titans. Can you unlock all the mysteries and successfully wield the power of the Infinity Blade in this timeless swordplay adventure of champions and villains? Tiny Wings [iPhone; Category: Games; Now free, down from $0.99] You have always dreamed of flying, but your wings are tiny. Luckily the world is full of beautiful hills. Use the hills as jumps -- slide down, flap your wings and fly.

  • The Xbox 360 turns five years old... in a purely theoretical sense

    by 
    Paul Miller
    Paul Miller
    11.22.2010

    Show of hands: how many of you bought an Xbox 360 in its first month or so of release, five long years ago? Alright, now how many of you still use that same Xbox regularly, with zero RRoDs getting in your way? Yeah, we thought so. The Xbox 360 has been an astounding success for Microsoft and for gamers, a particularly strong feat when you consider that it was Sony's race to lose going into this console generation. Still, when you talk Xbox history, it's hard not to see that huge red smudge on an otherwise stellar record. In hindsight, perhaps it was wise for Microsoft to do such a stellar job of taking the console online, beyond all the obvious reasons: the overheating hunk of plastic and silicon in our entertainment center didn't really mean much anymore, sentiments-wise. Instead it was our Gamertags and Gamerscores and cutesy Avatars that really mattered, the true "heart" of our console. We can't even count how many Xboxes we churned through in the past five years, with only Microsoft's most recent attempt finally solving some of the machine's egregious noise issues, but most of us stuck with the Xbox all the way through because that's where our friends were. Cute trick, Microsoft, but let's pick a slightly less expensive way to fail for the next generation, alright? Oh, and happy birthday Xbox; we'll meet you at 8pm with the pizza and the wine and the Black Ops... you just bring the sexy. Want to re-live a bit of the launch day insanity? Check out this little trip down Engadget memory lane: Live Xbox 360 shot! Engadget's live coverage of the Xbox 360 launch Xbox 360 hands-on preview Unpacking the Xbox 360 Xbox 360 gutted! Engadget Podcast 053 - 11.22.2005 Xbox 360 backward-compatibility list (1.0) released Boy, didn't we look young and naive back then? The world was our oyster. There were so many Halos yet to come.