My Dream App

Wednesday, 23 August 2006 09:31 pm
da: A smiling human with short hair, head tilted a bit to the right. It's black and white with a neutral background. You can't tell if the white in the hair is due to lighting, or maybe it's white hair! (lego)
[personal profile] da
[edit: unlocked b/c round one is over and I didn't make it; maybe someone will take the ideas and make this anyhow?]

Yesterday I entered My Dream App, a contest to propose a new Macintosh application, judged according to its novelty, use of Mac OS features, feasibility, and marketability. Three winners will get to see their applications developed commercially, plus they get royalties. In a week, the contest closes to new submissions, and they weed the bids down to 24 semi-finalists. (Go check it out; I'd love to see what my friends come up with as their ideal applications! Plus, I'd love to bounce ideas off everyone, and help come up with something else as your bid!)

The initial bid is limited to 800 characters (eek!) and they're up to over 1,500 submissions in the first 48 hours (eek!!) So
I don't suppose I'll make it to the second round. But who knows.

People who've read my fuming about Quicken on Mac may guess where my thoughts were this week. So sue me, my dream app is... a Quicken-killer. Yah, boring. How many people would use something like this?:

Title: Tweek or Ka-ching. (Maybe something else. I've got a week to decide.) [Edit: how about 'Reggie' short for Register?.. ]

Description:


A modern money-tracking program. We've got email receipts, paypal, bank and card transaction downloads. Checkbooks are 20th century. Automate!

Default interface presents eye-candy for your chosen important items (budgets, recent transactions, balances).

Use spotlight to find emailed receipts. Attach web receipts and web proofs-of-purchase. Download .qif and OFX data. All automatically, & via task scheduler.

One goal: minimize manual entry. OCR paper receipts via scanner/iSight. Automatically reconcile where possible. Learns your behaviour well enough to make money-tracking effortless.

Another goal: use the network. Open scripting API for plugins (IO/storage/control). What if it worked with billmonk.com? What if joint expenses carried to other person's view on their mac?


---

(Please don't share this beyond my friends-list; I locked it b/c I don't want someone else to submit the same idea.)

Critiques welcome. After all, I have 12 characters to spare. ;)

Date: Thursday, 24 August 2006 08:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earthling177.livejournal.com
OCR might rely on a dedicated scanner, for the first version (though that sucks too. Open scanner. lay down receipt. close scanner. press button. Lather/rinse/repeat.)

Well, yes and no. I guess the part that sucks with the scanner is the overhead (it will take about the same time per linear inch of the flatbed whether you have one or 4 receipts). That part can be solved by allowing multiple receipts to be scanned at once, at least one app (CanonScan) does that already for the picture part, I have not tested the OCR part, but I'm almost sure that the OCR part just takes documents, so the scan part can just break say, 6 receipts into 6 docs and feed them consecutively to the OCR.

Actually, not only that makes scanners more useful than they used to be, if you can now do finances too, but maybe one or more of the scanner manufacturers might be interested in bundling your app with their scanner -- at this point, they are all basically a commodity, selling from 50-150 bucks and desperately in need of anything to make them look different and better -- Canon scanners, for example, advertise they can be used vertically, LOL... while it's true and nice that they are thin enough to be put away between two external hard drives until you need to scan something, thus saving table space, it's very hard to use it on its side, not to mention it makes it impossible to scan stuff that is more than a few pages thick, like books.

Date: Thursday, 24 August 2006 10:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] da-lj.livejournal.com
Getting off the topic a bit... but: have you seen the newer wand scanners? I heard of one a few months ago, but I don't think I wrote down the brand name. That would be wonderful if they worked well..

Date: Thursday, 24 August 2006 10:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] earthling177.livejournal.com
I remember seeing one model, in passing, at my local CompUSA -- I didn't even stop or see what brand it was either, my first thought was "oh, they're trying that one again". I sure hope they work well, or at least better than the previous couple of tries since 1986. The reputation is that it takes a very steady pace to get good results. Granted, now we have enough computing power to embed in them that they might actually be working well. Then again, if you skew the scanner just a bit, the distortion is hard to correct. I guess they are a little desperate, unless one is in a very specialized application, like libraries or journalism, scanners don't have as high an appeal as they once had, now that photography is digital.

PS: Google seems to point to a lot of different brands, like Wizcom InfoScan, IRISPen and Planon System Solutions DocuPen. They all seem like OCR pens, no pictures (not that I expected pictures).

Date: Friday, 25 August 2006 01:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] da-lj.livejournal.com
hm. here's a mystery: the one I heard of was operated differently than those three: you waved the long side of the wand against the page. I'll see if I can figure out what it was.

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