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Posts Tagged ‘Novelty’

The iStrip Free Experiment - Part I

March 15th, 2009

novelty_200_iconThe story of iStrip began in May 2008, when we first came up with the idea of the making a stripper pen iPhone app. This was before the launch of the App Store and it seemed like a funny idea.

After learning a bit of Objective-C and Cocoa, iterating many times over the app to get to something that was a little ironic and not too seedy, we subitted it on August 20. It was rejected within 5 days due to “lack of utility” (really?). We gave up on it for a while and made some other apps with more utility, a few clocks, including the (really quite cool) Tokyo Time.

In November we started making some renewed efforts to get iStrip into the store, after Pull My Finger was approved, followed by an avalanche of Fart Apps. After several iterations and making the app ludicrously unoffensive, iStrip finally got approved on February 6, 2009.

We sold a few copies, about 200 over a week or so. We tried to get blogs and media folks to pick up on the iStrip story and how long it had taken us to create some awareness, but nobody seemed interested. The extensive covereage of farting apps had, rightfully, annoyed many readers and I think people were a bit tired of this whole topic. So nothing stuck and iStrip was on it’s way into obscurity.

Since we were only selling a handful of copies per day, we decided to make the app free, at least for a while. The effect was fantastic. Downloads instantly went to about 2,000/day and in those countries where the download numbers on the first couple of days had been enough to get iStrip into the Entertainment Top 100, downloads typically kept increasing and the ranking improved every day. In some countries, especially in New Zealand and Australia, iStrip took off. It went to about 5,000 downloads per day. We have written about this before. But we did not get traction in the crucial US market.

Then we had an update approved and suddenly that gave us the visibility in the store, just for that one day, which sent iStrip soaring to new levels. Downloads went to 10k, 15k, 20k, 25, and finally 30k/day in just a week. The app was in the Top 100 Entertainment charts in all countries, mostly in the Top 25 with a few No.1 spots. iStrip had also become one of the most popular apps overall and went into the Top 25 Free in quite a few countries, including No.2 in big markets like Canada. It was still not in the Top 50 in the US, which was really our goal, but it was well ahead in the charts of the awesome Google Mobile App with Voice Search. (Seriously people, are you insane?)

iStrip as a free application

iStrip as a free application

And then we decided to take the big risk and change it back to $0.99 in the hope that it would stick. We were not exactly sure what the effect would be on ranking, but assumed it would just disappear (which it did). Still, we had to give it a go.

On Saturday March 14, 2009, at 9.45am GMT, iStrip was holding the following chart positions around the world. We also include the total number of downloads the app had had over the preceeding seven days (you can sort this table by column for interesting results :) NOTE: The table will not show in your feed reader. You have to come to the site, sorry.

We submitted the price increase at 10.25am GMT and by 11am iStrip had disappeared from all charts around the world, both free and paid. It had become invisible. Fear set in. But by 12pm it started appearing in some, seemingly random, smaller countries again. And since then iStrip has steadily made progress everywhere.

At 8pm GMT today, the app is back in the Entertainment Top 100 in 36 markets, including, crucially, the US, Canada, the UK, Australia, Germany and others. It is also back in the Top 100 Free in 8 countries and trending upwards everywhere. We sold just over 800 copies yesterday, but don’t think that this will be a sustainable level, maybe for a few days. We shall see in Part II of this story.

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Get the original, banned and rejected iStrip! - Now Closed

February 7th, 2009
Obscene and offensive!

Obscene and offensive!

UPDATE (Feb 12): The Competition is now closed. No More iTunes vouchers will be given away.

iStrip has been rejected for inclusion in the App Store several times on the grounds that it contains potentially obscene and offensive material. It never did.

Now you can find out for youself, because we are making the original photo of our vintage model available for all iStrip fans!

iStrip allows you to add custom “bathing suit fabrics” from your photo library. Of course, they don’t need to be fabrics. You could add drawings or photographs. Anything you like, really.

Simply email us a screenshot of iStrip using your favourite “fabric” and we will send you the original bikini model photo. You can then import this to your photo library on the iPhone and use iStrip as it was always intended to work.

Send your favourite iStrip screenshot to istrip@rockcottageindustries.com and we will reply with the full size image of our vintage iStrip model. You can now download the original image from the iStrip page on this site.

We will publish the best screenshots we receive on this website. Let us know in your email if you want your name to be listed along with your image.

To our favourite entries we will award $10 gift vouchers for the US iTunes store. (The competition is now CLOSED) BUT So keep those screenshots coming.

(Btw, we will not publish anything offensive)

Get it from the App Store

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iStrip has launched as Novelty App

February 6th, 2009

novelty_200_iconToday the very first application we ever wrote for the iPhone has finally been approved! It’s original name was iStrip and we submitted it in August of 2007 for review. iStrip was a virtual stripper pen, a gimmick that boys used to play with when we were young in the 1970s.

iStrip was quickly rejected, because apparently it lacked “utility for the wider iPhone user community” (despite it being submitted to the ‘Entertainment’ category).

Offensive material?

Offensive material?

In December we made another attempt to get it published by adding a bit more ‘utility’ to it: a clock. This time we were told very directly that the app contained “offensive material”. This material was a woman in a bikini on the vintage 1960s photograph we used for our background. This version is the one you can see in the iStrip video on YouTube and AppTheater.

So we thought, let’s made the bikini bigger. At some point it has to stop being offensive, right? To make it more fun, we actually added the ability to choose bathing suit styles. Who could be offended by this? But no luck iStrip Clock did not get approved.

So in our final attempt we changed the name to “Novelty App”, changed the icon a bit and submitted the application as a game, stating that it contains ‘mild mature themes’. And guess what, this time it worked! Novelty App is now available in the App Store.

One great feature of Novelty App is that it allows you to pick one of your own photos as the bathing suit pattern. This opens up a few interesting possibilities :)

Get it from the App Store

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