
Everyone moans about the lack of Flash on the iPhone, right? Let’s face it: if someone makes a solid Flash implementation for the iPhone there would be substantially less interest in making native iPhone apps. You could create a rich user environment in the browser, and the iPhone App Store would be less and less relevant. As things stand now, I prefer native apps over browser apps for iPhone services. I use the dedicated mail client to access my GMail account, rather than load the mobile GMail interface in Safari. I use a dedicated Twitter client, FaceBook client, and LinkedIn client rather than load the mobile version of those sites (assuming a mobile version even exists!).
Often, though, no native client exists, and you’re stuck using a web site. It can be a real pain to find a mobile-friendly version of the sites you need, sometimes. Enter Taptu, the alternative search machine. This free app provides iPhone-friendly search results in a surprisingly intuitive way.
The app starts with a simple text entry box. Tap in it, and type in a search phrase. I recently started homebrewing, so beer has been on my mind a lot. I searched for beer.

Unfortunately for this review, the first result was a sucky spam landing page. But in Taptu’s defense, it was a mobile-optimized sucky spam landing page! The second page was the very informative Wikipedia entry on beer. Mmmm…beer.
At the top of the results screen you see your search terms, which you can edit, the Taptu control widget, which we’ll get to in a moment, and some dots. The dots are a pager, and indicate where in the search results you are. You simply flick through the search results in a coverflow fashion, and get to see previews of the result pages. If you want to see the full page, simply click the “View source” link and an inline browser will open. In this case, it’ll open the Wapedia (WAP-optimized version of Wikipedia) page for beer. Mmmmm…beer. Click the little gear in the bottom right and you’ll get options to share or save the link, or email yourself the contents of the result page. Pretty handy.
If you click the Taptu control widget at the top right of the screen, you can filter your search results in a number of useful ways.

As you can see, you can filter your search results to just iPhone sites, just Wikipedia, just Twitter, etc. This is a good way to narrow a search to find stuff you know you want without having to scroll past pages of unrelated results. In an early beta of the Taptu app that I tried, it included an annoying number of YouTube videos in my search results, and I found myself filtering results to get better accuracy. Thankfully, YouTube seems less prominent in search results returned in the current version of the app, and presumably the algorithms will continue to improve.
Another great feature of the current version of the Taptu app are context sensitive search filters included beneath the default search filters. As you can see, my search for beer produced a number of beer-related links.

Mmmmm…beeer.
Bottom line: Taptu is a pretty slick mobile search solution.

I can’t live without the threaded system, so the Mail client is out, Safari Gmail is in. I use the “older version” though since the new one is just too slow.
This is really very useful post for i phone users. Thanks for the post.
Hi Techob,
This is Jason Harris, US Community Manager for Taptu – we look forward to receiving feedback and conversing more about the app.
We’re quite excited to have it out.
-Jason
The premise that flash would render native apps less relavent shows a complete lack of tech understanding. Moronic, you should go back to blogging about comic books.
I also feel the same way about browsing the sites, it’s not the same overall iPhone experience that you expect.
Does anybody have any idea on the price differences these different applications can cost?
This looks really nice. I’m so setting a home page bookmark for this.
Been using the Taptu Web App for the iPhone for quite a while and I’m loving the native equivalent. It’s totally different user experience only searching and browsing content that is actually optimized for your device of choice.
Taptu looks great .It’ s really good for me and iphone users …Great .!!
tks a lot.. this s really great. I buy my iphone and this information is really relevant
Search news site in Canada, only got results on news stories, mostly in SI sport. Indexing doesn’t seem to be extensive.
Hmmm, I’m not really liking taptu’s actual functionality. The interface is really nice, no disagreement there, but the search isn’t that great. Am I the only one that thinks this, or are the above posters just in love with the interface?
Great app, I despise having to search for things by using the browser. Sometimes it can be very slow and half of the sites are built for the mobile but do not share the information I need. Taptu is an essential app on my iPhone.