

He is also the founder of ClassicGames, a multiplayer gaming website bought by Yahoo! in 1997 and became the precursor for Yahoo! Games.

IFart (or iFart Mobile) is the brainchild of Joel Comm, CEO of InfoMedia, a social media consulting firm. There are the standard features, notably the “Sneak Attack” if you want to embarrass someone by “farting” next to them, and “Security Fart” which allows your phone to “fart” if someone tries to use it without your permission. Favorite iFart sounds include Dirty Raoul, The Brown Mosquito, and Wipe Out.

It offers a range of farting sounds of different tones and timbres. You open the iFart app, select any of the 30-or-so fart sounds, and tap on the “Fart Now” button. The original “fart” app who instigated a “stinky” revolution was the iFart. That is definitely a stupid idea that made millions. But why were there so many? Apparently, there was big money in fart apps – for the most popular ones, they used to rake in almost $10,000 a day. Are fart apps tasteless apps? Definitely. Once upon a time, only about fifty or so apps were dedicated to simulating fart noises on the iPhone and iPod touch. We would also be able to play games with them – and also play games on them. It meant that we wouldn’t just be able to make calls or send text messages to someone wherever we went. It offers lonely Korean speakers four daily affectionate video calls recorded by a South Korean model, picking them out of a pool one hundred different messages.The early days of the iPhone and the App Store were also the glory days of novelty apps.
IPHONE IFART SECURITY SIMULATOR
This South Korean girlfriend simulator was probably an inevitability and almost certainly not the first of its kind, especially as AI technology advances and digital assistants like Apple’s Siri and Google Now become more ubiquitous.

Sadly, it doesn’t appear to have a sound-cancelling feature for snoring. The app itself is essential just a noise machine, helping your cubicle to emanate various totally-awake, work-related noises while you catch up on sleep after your Pimple Popper binge the night before. the installation of any one of these apps would probably raise an employer’s eyebrows, especially on a company phone, this is the only one that might actually manage to constitute grounds for dismissal all on its own. This one is basically exactly what you would expect, trading on one of humanity’s more viscerally compulsive impulses for some pretty astonishing success, with downloads in the millions. Supposedly, just 10 seconds of crying are enough to get a diagnosis based on “clinical research conducted in a pediatric hospital”, a not-at-all-vague claim that was almost certainly not invented by the developer’s marketing department during a coffee break. While the last app may have claimed to be able to help you interpret burblings from the beyond, this one ostensibly can interpret the cries of infants with “96% effectiveness”, what ever exactly that statistic is meant to mean. With millions of downloads, it should perhaps make you scream in frustration at the state of science education rather than in terror. Ghost Radar ClassicĮver envied the teams of “Ghost Hunters” who go round with camera crews and random collections of electronics claiming to be locating the deceased? Well, now you can get your own random and meaningless readings! This app claims to use the “various sensors” found on your mobile device to detect paranormal activity. Its most notable feature is probably the ability to enter multiple women to track, associate each with a specific password, and show only that individual in the app if the user is forced to enter it. I Am a Man While there plenty of apps on the market aimed at helping women manage and predict their menstrual cycles and fertility periods, this seems to be the only meant for the male market.
