Editor’s Note: The following article is reprinted from Macworld UK. Visit Macworld UK’s blog page for the latest Mac news from across the Atlantic.
Distant Suns from First Light for iPhone and iPod touch promises a way to join them.
Distant Suns uses the compass on the new iPhone 3GS to identify the planets, constellations, over a hundred galaxies and star clusters, and thousands of stars.
“Distant Suns gives users a faithful reproduction of the sky now or in the future or even back in Galileo’s time,” explains Distant Suns inventor Mike Smithwick.
“On Galilean Nights you’ll see just how far we’ve come since Galileo first aimed his handmade telescope toward the heavens 400 years ago. An event which quite literally changed the world.
“Learning about the night sky is much easier now than in Galileo’s time. It is hoped that seeing Jupiter’s four largest moons—called ‘Galilean Moons’ – will increase interest in what the night sky has to offer.”
Available from the the App Store, Distant Suns costs $4 and requires the iPhone 2.2.1 Software Update or later.
Distant Suns has a long history, having been first published for the Commodore Amiga in 1987.