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Divided app now available

Divided, my first iPhone application, is now available on the App Store. I’d love it if you’d buy a copy for you and all your friends!

Lovely complicated-bill splitting helpfulness: available now!

Should you get the error:

The problem is that the python-mysql egg cannot find the MySQL tools for your install, mysql_config being the particular one it’s after. The quickest solution is to add the path /usr/local/mysql/bin/ to your ~/.bash_profile’s PATH variable definition:

Remember to re-source your ~/.bash_profile to update your current shell’s PATH:

Then installing the egg should work fine. Or, at least, you should be past this issue.

Read and digest the following, from ReadWriteWeb:

While the focus of today’s Facebook announcements was the new Timeline profile, the Read, Watch, Listen media sharing apps have generated a lot of interest too. These so-called “social apps” haven’t been widely launched yet, but you can get a sense of what they will do by adding a couple of brand new newspaper social apps to your Facebook profile: The Guardian’s app and one from Washington Post.

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Divided app submitted

Over the past few months I’ve been building an iPhone application. It’s called Divided, and it’s a more intelligent bill splitting application than the ones I could already find.

In my own words:

Divided is the bill splitting application that doesn’t assume everybody ate the same thing. Tailor the split for your party’s needs, avoid bill issues and go home happy.

Developed to scratch my own itch, I began to think Divided was useful enough to put on the app store. So I spent a couple of months’ worth of spare time polishing the application and bugging my friends to try it out and tell me what they liked and what sucked. I think it’s come out well from this process, with many improvements and generally more praise than suck (at least in later betas).

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Walk the way Smurf Village walks

GigaOm reports:

Free apps with in-app purchases made up 48 percent of total App Store revenue according to Distimo, while paid apps with in-app purchases accounted for 24 percent and the remaining 28 percent came from paid-only apps.

Gateway drugs are gateway drugs, whatever the platform it would seem. I have noticed the consistent position of “freemium” games within the top-grossing lists for a few months now, such as the aforementioned blue people/white hats app. It would seem the in-app purchase of cows is a sure-fire money winner, presuming the cows are cute and the price right.