Filed under: WWDC, Deals, iPhone, iPod touch, App Review
Lonely Planet San Francisco City Guide for iPhone free for a limited time
Normally the Lonely Planet guides for iPhone are $15.99, so any way you look at it, getting the San Francisco guide (iTunes link) for free is a great purchase. At worst you'll see if you like the Lonely Planet way of doing things in a travel guide and at best you might discover something new in San Francisco. Yep, the guide is free in anticipation of WWDC, allowing attendees to do a little sightseeing if Apple's sessions aren't enough for you. I've only spent a bit of time with the app (I'm not in San Francisco, so testing the "nearby" functions won't happen until next week), but if you're familiar with the Lonely Planet guide books, you'll be pretty familiar with the content here. The app has a really long list for the table of contents, something I felt could be handled better. If you want to find travel information, for example, you'll have to scroll somewhere about 40% down -- this is not optimal if you need info in a hurry. In fact, scrolling through longs lists is so annoying Apple gave the iPod app a search tool and Coverflow browsing. Luckily the LP guide provides a text search which I found quite useful.
Browsing content is terrifically easy, with a slim design that allows you to move forward and back between articles, increase text size or go back up to whatever screen you were previously at, like a search page. Speaking of those searches and the content, a cursory search for Moscone brought up no precise info on the convention center. It is mentioned in a reference to Yerba Buena, but otherwise lacks details.
The map suffers from static information and a lack of one-way street info (kind of important in cities filled with them, but only if you drive). I much prefer the maps and interaction of the AAA Discounts app, complete with animation and cleaner graphics. There are complaints about missing hotels and whatnot, but I've never fully trusted any guidebook to find every hotel and restaurant. Plus, there's always Urbanspoon and a plethora of apps for discovering new places to eat around you.
Obviously if you are ever planning to travel to San Francisco it'd be hard to turn down a free app so full of info. I don't think it'll replace anything like your Maps app, or Urbanspoon, or Yelp-based apps, but that's not the point. As a guide full of history and photos, hotel and restaurant data, workable maps and tons of "getting around" data, the Lonely Planet San Francisco City Guide is incredibly handy.
Gallery: Lonely Planet San Francisco Guide


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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Matt Midgley said 11:58AM on 6-02-2009
It looks to me like the other guides are all $9.99
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Victor Agreda, Jr. said 12:23PM on 6-02-2009
Weird, this morning they were $15.99 (and the copy on the app page says as much). Probably having a sale -- which is good!
Kristin said 12:32PM on 6-02-2009
It's free?
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Carl said 1:02PM on 6-02-2009
I'm a big travel addict and own a bunch of travel guides.
I'll try out the free SF guide, but I have reservations about spending $15.99 on an iPhone based guidebook when I can get the real deal for not much more than that.
I'd say $9.99 is a better price point.
You can pickup the actual printed version of the Lonely Planet San Francisco guide book for a mere $12 so why in the hell would I pay $15.99 for the iPhone version?
LP needs to get their pricing more in line with reality.
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klew said 9:21PM on 6-02-2009
The only justification I can see is if the Lonely Planet guides include free updates, instead of having outdated paperbacks after a year (I didn't see mention of it in the app store).
oakie said 1:36PM on 6-02-2009
you fail to mention one of its best features in that all of Lonely Planet's guides are completely self-contained and do not require a data connection for use.
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oakie said 1:37PM on 6-02-2009
oops... too soon, junior.
forgot to make note that since it doesnt rely on data to use, you wont be at the mercy of at&t's crap service wherever there's more than 5 iPhone users within a block of each other.
Victor Agreda, Jr. said 2:33PM on 6-02-2009
Good point! In fact, if you do wind up launching to Safari, it'll warn you about data use in the handy dialog seen here:
http://www.tuaw.com/photos/lonely-planet-san-francisco-guide/2050910/
Lizette said 3:37PM on 6-02-2009
Awesome! Just downloaded it! I'm planning a trip to SF the end of June so this will be useful! Thanks for the update.
You can follow me on twitter @ http://www.twitter.com/lizettegagne
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kakapo said 9:13PM on 6-02-2009
This is the first app from the app store that has literally frozen my iPhone. :(
I really like Lonely Planet stuff. So, I dnld this and plugged and lo and behold as the app was uploading into my iPhone - all went very black and my phone froze.
Maybe, it is the coriolis effect. Things are different here in Oz... :P
I almost thought I was going to have to do the dreaded restore routine.
Ah, but all worked out - but I cannot load this on my iPhone.
;(
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cosmic said 1:51AM on 6-06-2009
No one is discussing how unpleasant it is to use this app. Sure, it great that they crammed a big book of information into this app, but actually using it is hard. It only took me a few minutes to realize how hard it was to get to the information that your looking for. The most common information is buried in the app. Lots of info (scrolling, scrolling...still scrolling) with a poor user interface. It would be faster to just look it up in the Printed book version.
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Otsego_Undead said 12:30PM on 6-04-2009
Sweet! just in time. Headed to SF for the first time next Friday! (yeah I should've planned for next week)
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