Sporcle for iPhone

14.05.2010
I do not care to calculate the man-hours of labor I've probably lost over on , the online quiz site that tests your ability to recall trivia under time constraints. In my defense, I'd like to point out that every minute of every working day cannot be go-go-go, so what better way to spend some of that down time than seeing if I can name or or--if I'm feeling particularly squirrelly--? It certainly beats staring off into the middle distance.

So it was with a mix of both excitement and trepidation that I learned Sporcle was taking its act on the road in the form of an app for the iPhone and iPod touch. Excitement, because for the iPhone promised another way for me to enjoy one of my favorite mentally-stimulating pastimes. Trepidation, because I feared I would never enjoy another productive moment again, with Sporcle quizzes just a tap away.

As it turns out, I needn't have worried. In making the jump from the Web to a mobile device, Sporcle loses a lot in the translation.

The iPhone version of Sporcle works the same way as the Website: the app offers hundreds of quizzes in 15 categories, including Sports, Science, History, and Geography. After you select one of those quizzes, you've got a set amount of time to type in all the answers. And therein lies the problem with this mobile quiz app--while typing in the name of every World Series-winning manager or Olympic host city on your computer's keyboard is no great challenge, it requires a bit more effort on an iPhone or iPod touch. Reasonable people can debate the pros and cons of the iPhone's on-screen keyboard, but I think there's one thing we can agree that it's particularly ill-suited for--typing out things quickly as a clock ticks down.

Take Sporcle's quiz in which you're asked to rattle off the names of the 13 colonies in a minute. I can type as many as 10 and that's not, as I'm sure you've concluded, because I am a moron. Rather, I just can't type those 13 names in just 60 seconds--not on the iPhone's keyboard. And if that makes you think less of my mental acuity or typing ability, I would suggest that you use the iPhone's keyboard to tap out "Massachusetts," "New Hampshire," "Pennsylvania," and "Rhode Island," and see how many ticks of the clock you've got left. Not enough to enter in the southern colonies, I'm willing to wager.

(Pro Tip: The iPhone's auto-complete feature helps out a little bit here, but only a little. The names of more common answers--states, presidents, countries--will appear as you type them, and you can tap the space bar to accept those suggestions. But that will add a space at the end of your answer, and Sporcle won't recognize it as the correct one until you hit the back button to delete that space.)