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Top 10 iPhone Apps from Israel

Want to find the best fettuccine in town? Make free calls? Translate your tweets? There's a blue-and-white app for all that, and more. We give you the best of Israel's iPhone apps.

By: Brian Blum
Published: March 26th, 2011 in Business » Israel
Fooducate iPhone AppPic: NULL

Whether you're looking for something healthy to eat or trying to plot the best way home through rush-hour traffic, there's an application for that on your iPhone. And if you look under the hood, you might just discover it's made in Israel.

With its expertise in cellular technologies, a love affair with the cell phone, and a fast national adoption rate for the iPhone - despite the fact Israelis pay some of the highest prices in the world for the privilege - it's not surprising that Israelis have plunged into development of iPhone applications.

ISRAEL21c combed through some of the best Israeli apps to come up with our top 10 blue-and-white list for the iPhone.

1. Fooducate

With a recent positive write-up in The New York Times, Fooducate is the latest darling of the Israeli iPhone app scene. And it's healthy to boot. The concept is simple: before you buy a product at the grocery store, check out what's really in it. If its bite is worse than its crunch, Fooducate will suggest an alternative that's better for your body (if not for your pocketbook).

The app uses the iPhone's built-in camera to scan a product's bar code. Using its own proprietary algorithm, Fooducate counts up the nutrients and assigns a letter grade from A to D. The app is smart enough to spot cleverly disguised additives - did you know that "autolyzed plant protein" is just another way to say MSG?

Fooducate is primarily for products manufactured in the United States, and its database isn't yet complete (the company encourages users to snap pictures of items they'd like to see covered and send them in).

2. FiddMe

FiddMe is also a food app, but it takes a very different approach than Fooducate. Rather than aiming to educate, FiddMe wants to turn eating into a worldwide social game - a kind of FourSquare for foodies.

FiddMe allows users to take pictures of great meals they're eating (in real time) and post the snapshot and information about the restaurant to the cloud. Other FiddMe users can tap into the growing database of yummy recommendations. The service is integrated with other location-aware apps like FourSquare and Facebook. You can also post to Twitter or to the FiddMe website.

FiddMe is not competing directly with user-generated recommendation services like Yelp. Those focus on restaurants as a whole, while FiddMe drills down to the quality of the fettuccini. Not surprising from an app created by a bunch of self-described Israeli "foodies."

3. Waze

Waze has tackled a problem we've all experienced - getting stuck in traffic and not knowing the best alternative routes - and crowd-sourced it. Users automatically add information about traffic tie-ups in real time - without having to do a thing. Waze tracks where drivers are via GPS. If there are more drivers than expected in a certain stretch of road, the Waze map will turn red.

So if Highway 101 is backed up coming into San José, Waze will instantly tell you if Interstate 280 is the better bet. That's a whole lot faster than waiting for the radio to report the latest jams every 15 minutes. And it's one of the reasons the service has proved incredibly popular, with more than two million drivers signed up.

The automated aspect to Waze is particularly welcome, since texting while driving is a big no-no. But users stopped at a red light can more proactively input traffic information. And to really keep things safe, Waze turns off the keyboard when the car is in motion - neat!

Waze has other features - such as allowing drivers to build maps together, create private groups to share tips, and even play interactive social games.

Waze is free, in keeping with its 2006 roots as an open-source project called FreeMaps. The service began in Israel but is available all over the world.

4. Viber

Within three days of Viber's launch in December 2010, some one million people had downloaded it. Two months later, the number is up to an overwhelming 10 million. What's all the fuss about? Viber, a free app, aims to be the Skype-killer, a voice-over-IP phone service that integrates seamlessly into your iPhone's contact list and allows you to make free calls to other Viber users anywhere in the world.

The app is drop-dead simple: Install it, and any other Viber users in your contact list show a Viber icon. Since the Viber app runs in the background (and the company claims it doesn't drain the phone's battery like Skype does), calling that contact for free is a single tap away.

Viber also doesn't require any registration (another step saved) and uses your phone number as your ID. Contrast that with Skype, where you have to sign up for a unique ID and use only the Skype app to make calls. Viber "officially" only supports the iPhone, but savvy callers claim it works on the iPad and iPod Touch as well. Android and BlackBerry versions are coming soon.

5. Fring

Fring is another made-in-Israel app that allows free phone calls. Unlike Viber, Fring piggybacks on existing phone networks like Google Talk, ICQ, Twitter, Facebook and more, acting as a universal communications center for voice, chat and even video calls. You open the Fring app and get a separate contact list you can then call any friends on the list at no cost.

For friends not on the list, "Fring Out" calls start at one cent per minute (although that can jump to as high as 44 cents per minute for far-flung locations like Samoa and Zimbabwe).

Fring got a big boost when the iPhone 4 with its front-facing camera came out last year, making video calls a major attraction (the upcoming iPad 2 is rumored to have the same feature).

The app also has a "Fring Stream" that consolidates all your Twitter tweets and Facebook updates (plus, of course, any Fring chats and calls) in one place.

There's one service that's noticeably missing from the Fring roster: Skype. Fring used Skype's network to enable video calls for several years until December 2010, when they parted ways. Fring claims Skype blocked its service Skype says Fring had been misusing its software and decided to pull out on its own. Either way, Fring is slightly less useful than it was six months ago.

For the rest of the top 10 apps, please click here.

This article first appeared on Israel21c and is reprinted with permission.

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