Save Your Money! 3 Helpful iPhone App reviews from AndrewBayer.com

There are a few iPhone apps that keep coming up as possible solutions as to how to get comic book images and files onto your iPhone: Files, FileMagnet, and TouchFS. The good news for today is that Andrew Bayer from This Ain’t No Disco has tried out a couple of these apps and experimented with using them as an iPhone comic book reader. He details his results at: http://andrewbayer.com/blog/2008/08/reading-comics-on-the-iphone-an-initial-survey/

DataCase file manager for iPhone

Datacase for iPhone

Coming soon: I just bought the Datacase app for the iPhone, and after a short time (and a separate helper program) I got it to do exactly what I’ve been trying… Yes…I have turned my iPhone into a fully-functional comic book reader. It’ll be a few days before I can type up the full tutorial, but check back soon, because the problem has been solved!
Apple iTunes

iPhone Manga Converter from MangaWare

The iPhone Manga Converter from MangaWare is an interesting app that lets you prep comic files on your computer that you can upload to a web server and view anytime on your iPhone.

The process is very clever, but hard to explain…that’s why they’ve included a demo video on their website. Looks kinda freaky. I tried it out last night and after a short learning curve, I was able to read some old comics on my iPhone.

iPhone Manga Viewer

iPhone Manga Viewer application

The process works very nicely as long as you have your own web space available for uploads. Basically, the software allows you to turn the pages of your comic book scans into individual little web pages that are automatically optimized exactly for the iPhone. Once the conversion process is done, you need to upload the folders to your personal web server using FTP or your web host’s file manager. Once that’s done, you (or anybody else you share the url with) can type the url of your web space directory right into your iTunes web browser like this:

http://yourdomain.com/folder

The interface allows you to view a little index page where you can see all the pages of the story.

iPhone screen shows the index page as seen when using iPhone Manga Converter app.

This is the index page as you see it on your iPhone.

From there you can start reading at any page, and use little icons in the screen corners to go forward or backward through the pages.

iPhone works as a digital comic book reader with the help of the iPhone Manga Converter from Mangaware

A more advanced option allows you to chop up the story into individual panels which will fill the screen space when tapped. This is a good idea, but I was not able to get the program to auto-detect where the panel shapes are…probably because the pages I have scanned in are in color and not as high-contrast as the pages used in the software example.

Take a look at the demo video and see what you think…

Apple iTunes

How to Use iPhone as a Comic Book Reader

“Is it possible to read comics on my new iPhone 3G?” was the first question on my mind after I finally got my hands on my new geeky gadget. I bet with all the new iPhone apps, somebody makes a .cbr reader for iPhone, right?

Using my iPhone as a <!-- google_ad_section_start(weight=ignore) -->comic<!-- google_ad_section_end --> Book Reader

I got the iPhone 3G because it’s a tiny little Internet browser (I hardly ever use it as an actual phone). I’m kind of addicted to reading the various comic book blogs, and I love the idea of being able to surf the blogosphere while waiting in line or during bumper-to-bumper traffic. Kidding on that last one.    For now.

First stop: see if there is a comic book reader iPhone app that does the trick…hopefully an iPhone app that can read .cbr, .cbz and .pdf files. A Google search brought up a couple candidates, but they’re hacks that require you to “jailbreak” your iPhone (in other words, hacking the iPhone software and reprogramming it yourself). Look…I just spent a good chunk of change on this pretty gizmo…I’m not interested in “cracking” it!
Nope…not going THAT route.

You CAN read comics on the iPhone

The iPhone’s built-in Photo viewer application seemed to work pretty well, so the first thing I did was create a folder containing some Bob Hope comic scan jpegs. I created that folder by unzipping a standard .cbr file into separate jpegs. I do that by changing the .cbr extension to .rar and then unarchiving them. Then I synced that image folder with my iPhone…

Good idea, but when I viewed the pages on the iPhone, I found them to have been magically degraded in resolution…so much that images were too blurry to comfortably read. What gives? Turns out that the iPhone automatically “optimizes” (= ruins) the images when you import them. No workaround for this yet.

PDF files don’t get degraded when you import them into your iPhone, but the iPhone needs a native PDF reader even more than it needs a comic book reader application. The only way to get a PDF file into your iPhone right now is to email it to yourself and read it as an attachment. I don’t want to wait for a 35Mb download over the iPhone’s bandwidth. Not a viable solution IMHO.

Reading Comic Books on the iPhone

Lastly, I used screen-capture software to take screen-caps of the individual panels of a comic story. I used SnagIt (which I love dearly…it’s like Photoshop for screengrabs) to capture and compile a folder full of single-panel — or sometimes single-tier — images which I then put in a folder and synced to the iPhone. This approach actually produced a nice readable iPhone comic!
The only problem with this method was that it was extremely tedious
and time-consuming to make individual captures of all those panels.

Sigh.

There are some promising apps I’ll be looking at in the next few days. Until then, please let me know what’s been working for you, and enjoy these links to more iPhone comic book reader news:

More links about using iPhone as Comic Book Reader:
Still More iPhone 3G links…but just for fun ^_^

Apple iTunes