Friday, September 6, 2013

Android Apps of the Week: Silent Text, MetroNap, PrivacyFix and More



Well, it’s Friday, and despite it only being a four-day work week for many of you, we’re still proud of you for making it to the end. Here are the best of the best Android apps we found this week, one for each day of working our fingers to the bone.




ku xlarge24 Android Apps of the Week: Silent Text, MetroNap, PrivacyFix and More S


Silent Text: Whether your job makes you to prone to encountering sensitive information or you just like to pretend it does, this mobile encryption app from the folks at Silent Circle should set you at ease. Users can transfer up to 100 MB files—any type of file at all—with end-to-end encryption, with keys stored on the users’ own devices. So even if someone managed to hack into Silent Circle’s servers, your data would be totally unreadable. And like SnapChat, users can set files to be destroyed immediately after they’re viewed, or even yank them back before they’ve been opened. [Free with $10/month Silent Circle subscription]




ku xlarge25 Android Apps of the Week: Silent Text, MetroNap, PrivacyFix and More


MetroNap: We’ve all done it. After a tough day at work or a long night of drinking, the gentle motion of the subway rocks you right to sleep, and the next thing you know, you wake up in the Bronx. MetroNap promises to wake you up a few seconds before you reach your stop. To use it, you start by putting in the name of your starting station and your destination. The app then uses your smartphone’s accelerometer to detect when when the train is moving and when it’s standing still. While we’re unsure how it might distinguish a station stop from stopping between stations due to delays, it’s still better than waking up 15 stops from home — though right now it’s only available in New York City. [Free]




ku xlarge26 Android Apps of the Week: Silent Text, MetroNap, PrivacyFix and More


AVG Privacy Fix: Look, sharing stuff on social media is a minefield, and with default settings changing all the time, you might not know who actually gets to see what. Log in to Facebook, LinkedIn or Google via PrivacyFix, however, and you’ll get an instant privacy audit telling you which settings you might want to adjust to keep your bad habits under wraps. [Free]




ku xlarge27 Android Apps of the Week: Silent Text, MetroNap, PrivacyFix and More


Calculator: This hot-rodded version of Android’s calculator is built in to CyanogenMod, but it’s now available in a format any Android user can install. It brings graphing calculator capabilities to your phone, so instead of looking like a nerd playing with your Ti-89, you’ll just look like you’re texting. [Free]








source : http://techie.id1945.com/2013/09/android-apps-of-the-week-silent-text-metronap-privacyfix-and-more/

Samsung Galaxy Note 3 and Note 10.1 review: overflowing with features



Samsung is giving its latest Galaxy Note smartphone a stylish makeover.


The Galaxy Note 3, unveiled Wednesday, has a soft, leather-like back. It feels like you’re holding a fancy leather-bound journal. Grooves on the side of the big-screen phone make it easier to grip.


But I found the new phone to be complicated to use. There’s too much going on. Between Scrapbook, My Magazine, Air Command and dozens of other functions, it might take even the most experienced smartphone user several hours to figure out.


I tested out the Note 3 for about 45 minutes Wednesday at a Samsung press event in a New York hotel. The company also unveiled its next tablet, the Galaxy Note 10.1, which is basically an extra-large version of the Galaxy phone, but without the mobile connectivity. The phone and its pen were both tied down to a table with a security device, so I was hampered testing it out. A colleague spent several minutes with the tablet and was likewise hampered.


But I saw enough of the Note 3 to at least like its look and feel.




Samsung Galaxy Note 3 006 Samsung Galaxy Note 3 and Note 10.1 review: overflowing with features

Samsung Galaxy Note 3


With its leather-like back and the stitching around it, the phone feels expensive and well made in my hands. The soft back can be snapped off the phone to reveal the battery. Samsung will sell replaceable back covers in several different colours, but the phone itself will come in just three: black, white or pink.


The Note 3 has a bigger screen than its predecessor, measuring 5.7in (14.5cm) diagonally compared with the Note 2′s 5.5in (14cm). But it weighs less (167 grams compared with 182 grams) and is slightly thinner at 0.33in (8.4mm) rather than 0.37in (9.4mm).


Pointing to change


The biggest changes are with the S Pen. The pen unlocks a new feature called Air Command. With that, you can open five other features:


• Action Memo lets you handwrite a note.


• Scrapbook lets you circle content you like, such as a YouTube video or a news article. It automatically saves and organises the content into a format that’s easy to scroll through. Scrapbook, with its boxy format, looks a lot like social media site Pinterest.


• Screen Write captures a screen and allows you to write comments on that captured image.


• S Finder is the phone’s search engine, to find chat messages, documents or other content on the phone.


• Pen Window, the most promising of the five, lets you access one of eight apps by drawing a box of any size on the screen. Let’s say you’re on a web page and need to calculate something. You can open Air Command, then Pen Window. Draw a box on the screen, and eight icons pop up. You then click the one for the calculator. Pen Window currently opens a limited number of applications: calculator, clock, YouTube, phone, contacts, a browser and two separate chat apps – Samsung’s ChatON and Google’s Hangouts. (Two different ones? Did I mention the phone’s complicated to use?) It’s possible Pen Window will support additional apps later.


I couldn’t figure out how to open Air Command on my own. During a presentation beamed into the New York hotel’s TV sets from Berlin, where Samsung unveiled the device, a company executive said that pointing the pen to the screen was all it took to open Air Command. That wasn’t the case. A Samsung representative in New York showed me how to use it. I learned that to get to Air Command, I had to click the S Pen’s button while hovering over the screen.


Search and you might find




Samsung Galaxy Note 3 008 Samsung Galaxy Note 3 and Note 10.1 review: overflowing with features

Samsung Galaxy Note 3. Photograph: Sean Gallup/Getty Images


Another new feature, My Magazine, was also hard to find. My Magazine was developed in partnership with Flipboard, an app that pulls content from news sources and your social media accounts and presents it in an easy-to-read magazine format. My Magazine does the same thing. It is customisable, pulling news content from various news sources based on subjects you want to follow, such as business or food related articles. You can also sync it with your Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Tumblr and other social media accounts. My Magazine is well designed and is a place where you can easily catch up with all your social media accounts and news in one place.


But first I had to find it. A representative had to show me that an upward swipe at the bottom of the screen opens it up.


The redesigned S Pen is tough to use. It is small and thin, making it hard to grip. Not surprisingly, the button on the stylus was quite small, too. You end up spinning the pen around every time you need to click it. The phone and tablet is very geared toward the pen, rather than pinching and swiping with your fingers as with other phones such as Apple’s iPhone and even Samsung’s flagship Galaxy S4.


I had no problem converting my handwritten phone numbers into digital contacts on the phone. But my colleague, who admits she has messy handwriting, says the tablet had trouble reading it.


Screen test


The phone’s screen is crisp and very clear. I watched several YouTube videos and a preview for Iron Man 3. The bigger screen makes watching video a joy, and I can see myself watching movies on it instead of a tablet. The new phone’s screen resolution is far better on the Note 3 at 386 pixels per inch (ppi) rather than 264ppi on the Note 2. (By comparison, the iPhone 5 offers 326ppi.)


The phone’s 13-megapixel camera took clear shots, but it was slower than I’m used to on my iPhone 4S, the model from 2011. A processing alert pops up for a second while a photo is saving.


Taking the tablet


The Galaxy Note 10.1 tablet, also unveiled on Wednesday, has the same features of the Note 3 phone, just with a bigger, 10in (26cm) screen. Like the phone, it has the leather-like backing and grooves on the side.


The tablet has a few extra bells and whistles. One of the big perks is the tablet’s file organisation system, which is similar to that of a traditional personal computer. It lets you create folders and sub-folders for documents, providing easy access. Also like a PC, the tablet lets you create up to eight profiles, so you can let your children, spouse or guests use the tablet without fear that they will read your email, delete your photos or access apps you don’t want them to.


The tablet also comes with a host of freebies that the phone doesn’t have, including free trial subscriptions to the New York Times, Bloomberg Businessweek and other news sources, along with extra space with online storage service Dropbox.


The tablet’s display is bright and clear, good for watching TV or viewing photos. It also has stereo speakers and cameras on both its front and back sides.


Samsung said the phone and tablet will ship worldwide in most countries on 25 Septmber, but it will come “later” in the US – Samsung didn’t say when, other than some time before Christmas.


The company also didn’t say how much the devices will cost.


For me? I’m eligible for a new phone upgrade on my Verizon Wireless contract. I was waiting to see if Apple will launch a new phone this month. But after testing out the Note 3, I’m considering both. I need more time with the Note 3, though, to figure it all out.




*http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNFOFvIA9tdzxypBAvBMEUXmFSy1Hg&url=http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2013/sep/05/samsung-galaxy-note-3-review-note-10-1






source : http://techie.id1945.com/2013/09/samsung-galaxy-note-3-and-note-10-1-review-overflowing-with-features/

iPhone Apps of the Week: CARROT Alarm, Ping, and More



It may not be official, but with the start of September, summer is pretty much out the door. No one likes to see those sunny days fall by the wayside, so we’re sure there was a bit of gloom hanging over the workweek. Fortunately, we’ve got a whole slew of iOS apps for you to take your mind off your troubles. Just push ‘em way deep down inside—it’s the healthy thing to do.




ku xlarge20 iPhone Apps of the Week: CARROT Alarm, Ping, and More S Ping : Instead of swiping and sliding emails into categories to be read later or archived, Pings takes a wholly different approach. Here, email conversations are separated by the individual contact, much in the same way your text messages are organized. If you get emails from someone not in your contacts—usually a business or newsletter—they end up on an entirely different page thats jus ta swipe away and all grouped together. You can currently use Ping with Gmail, AOL, Yahoo!, and iCloud accounts. Plus, if both people in the conversation use Ping, the thread gets some iMessage-like boosts such as quicker response times and an indication of when the other person is typing. Ping will be available in the App Store starting September 18, and you can sign up to reserve your spot now over at Ping’s website. [TBD]




ku xlarge21 iPhone Apps of the Week: CARROT Alarm, Ping, and More S Push Launcher : Push Launcher’s a super simple app that does one little thing but does it well; it gives you a means of putting all your most used app in one, easy to access place—your notification center. The app features a (supposedly) intuitive interface that lets you add, delete, and edit apps from your pulldown menu. You can even schedule an app to open up on its own using push notifications. So if you know you like to read the New York Times on your phone at a certain time of morning, you can set a push notification to make opening up the app as easy as possible. [Free this week]




ku xlarge22 iPhone Apps of the Week: CARROT Alarm, Ping, and More S CARROT Alarm : CARROT is a “sentient” alarm clock. She plays aggressively chipper music to wake you up, makes you perform tasks with your phone so you actually have to focus, and keeps track of points. You can’t win a more pleasant wakeup experience, but you can use them to unlock better alarm tones and routines. Eventually you can even use points to get CARROT to recite bedtime stories to you. Which sounds pretty dreadful. But points! CARROT Alarm Clock syncs with CARROT To-Do, and to multiple iDevices. [$2]




ku xlarge23 iPhone Apps of the Week: CARROT Alarm, Ping, and More S


Path : This week, Path introduced a premium, pay-for service. Path 3.2 for Android and iOS now allows users unlimited access to the network’s stickers, camera filters and all manner of other things for a monthly or annual fee. Subscriptions for iOS sell for $5 for three months and $15 for a year. It’ll help Path generate revenue, and in return offer users more features—stickers! photo filters!—and a more customizable experience, according to Path. Though we’re yet to find out exactly what that means. But it raises the question: are you prepared to start paying for a social network? [Free, $5/3 months, $15/year]




*http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNGcd3qLTsYoO9L5obgkjCRaqqAHrQ&url=http://gizmodo.com/iphone-apps-of-the-week-carrot-alarm-ping-and-more-1266101370






source : http://techie.id1945.com/2013/09/iphone-apps-of-the-week-carrot-alarm-ping-and-more/

BBM for iPhone submitted to App Store two weeks ago, says BlackBerry exec

A New Google Technology Aims To Make Apps Run Everywhere—Well, Almost

Samsung’s new Galaxy Note 10.1 brings refined design



BERLIN — With eight-core processing power and 3GB of RAM hidden under its louche leather-look frame, the Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 (2014 Edition) could be the most powerful tablet ever made.


The new Note 10.1 for 2014 was unveiled alongside the Samsung Galaxy Note 3 and Galaxy Gear smartwatch at technology trade show IFA in Berlin. Like the Note 3, the Note 10.1 sports a svelte new leather-effect rear casing edged with stitching — perhaps a riposte to the criticism drawn by the glossy plastic back of previous Notes and the Galaxy S4.


I can understand the Note 3 and its midsize predecessors: they bridge the gap between phone and tablet for people who want big screens without completely sacrificing pocketability. But the original 10-inch Note left us scratching our heads and wondering what’s the difference between that and a Galaxy Tab?



But now, with its eight-core chip, clever S Pen, and beefed-up multitasking features, the Note 10.1 is in danger of making Samsung’s original Galaxy Tab tablets look like the poor relations.


The senior Note shares many of the new features of the smaller Note 3, including new multitasking features and new uses for the S Pen stylus. In the past, a stylus was required to find small buttons and icons on small and insensitive screens. In these days of 10-inch screens and responsive touch screens sensitive enough to feel the tremor of a gnat’s wing brushing infinitesimally across a home screen widget, a stylus feels like an anachronism. So Samsung has effectively come up with stylus 2.0, endowing the S Pen with extra features that mean it’s no longer an unnecessary accessory.


Going on sale this fall, the Note 10.1 is encased in a textured, leather-effect rear with stitching around the edge. Like the Note 3 it’s decked out in the style of an expensive wallet, and coupled with the classy metal rim, it doesn’t look half bad. At just 7.9mm thick and weighing 535g, the heavy-duty specs feel light in the hands.


Set into the strokable leather-effect case is an 8-megapixel camera with LED flash, complemented by a 2-megapixel camera in the front for video chat.


Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 5847 2 610x458 Samsungs new Galaxy Note 10.1 brings refined design

Couched in the leather back of Samsung’s Galaxy Note 10.1 is the lens for an 8-megapixel camera and its accompanying LED flash.


(Credit:

Josh Miller/CNET)



Going hands-on

Getting hold of the new Note 10.1, it makes a good first impression. While some Samsung tablets have creaky casings or feel less than luxurious, the trimmed-down dimensions of this new effort make it much more appealing.


The pattern on the back is plastic, and nothing like real leather, but it’s still much more pleasant to grip than the sweaty, glossy plastic of the last Note 10.1, and the trimmed edges and slim casing give the impression that this could be the best tablet Samsung’s ever designed.


Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 5817 2 610x458 Samsungs new Galaxy Note 10.1 brings refined design

Pixels vanish into invisibility on Samsung’s Galaxy Note 10.1 for 2014.


(Credit:

Josh Miller/CNET)



The display is bright and colourful, and extremely sharp to boot. Icons and images look very crisp thanks to the very high 2,560×1,600-pixel screen resolution, and the new Note moves with a pleasing page, too — the new processing power ensures there’s no lag or stutter when you swipe around its various menus and home screens.


The new Note certainly feels like one of the best 10.1-inch tablets made yet (although that’s not particularly strong praise), but it remains to be seen whether it can succeed against rivals like the Nexus 7, which is smaller and — crucially — very cheap. Here’s hoping Samsung has the good sense to offer its latest gadget with a reasonable price tag.




Core blimey




Samsung first unveiled its eight-core processor with the Samsung Galaxy S4 smartphone, but only the lucky few in certain parts of the world get to enjoy the eight-core S4: it comes with a boring old quad-core chip in most of the world. The 3G and Wi-Fi versions of the Note 10.1 promises a 1.9GHz octa-core chip and 3GB of RAM, but once again the choice of chip will vary depending on where you are. Samsung has yet to confirm full details.


Sadly the 4G LTE model only has a quad-core chip, so you sacrifice some processing power for extra data speed. But the 4G version still has a pretty monstrous 2.3GHz quad-core chip keeping things motoring along.


The giant and hugely detailed screen and whichever monster chip you get are kept fueled by an equally beastly 8,220mAh battery. Other advanced features include the latest, fastest flavour of Wi-Fi, 802.11 ac, as well as Wi-Fi Direct and Bluetooth 4.0. There’s a choice of 16GB, 32GB, or 64GB models.




S Pen


The S Pen sets the Note tablet apart from the rest of Samsung’s tablets. One new feature is the Air Command wheel, which appears on screen when you pull out the stylus or hover the tip over the screen and press the button on the side. This onscreen wheel contains shortcuts to S Pen features that bring your scribbles to life.


In a handwritten memo, you can call a jotted-down phone number, visit a URL, or find a scrawled location on a map by drawing a box round the text and hitting the relevant icon. You’re then taken to the dialer app, browser, or maps app with your text already filled in.


017 SamsungGalaxyTab10.1 35827193 610x407 Samsungs new Galaxy Note 10.1 brings refined design

If you hover the S Pen over the screen, it will pull up the Air Command wheel, where you can save content on your screen, or create a new S Note.


(Credit:

Sarah Tew/CNET)



Also on the Air Command wheel is the new Scrapbook app for saving snippets of text, pictures, Web pages, or anything else you want to refer back to later, complete with your own tags or handwritten notes. Scrapbook syncs between Samsung devices, but unlike other more comprehensive scrapbooking services like Evernote, you can’t access your clippings online.




More multitasking




A 10-inch tablet gives you a bigger screen to enjoy movies and games. But the Note family steps things up, using the big screen to say, hey, you know what, we’ve got all this room, let’s fill it with two apps at the same time.


The Note’s Multi Window feature divides the screen in half between two apps of your choice — although not all apps currently support multitasking — allowing you to drag and drop text, images links, and more from one app to another without having to constantly leave one and switch to the other.


You can even have the same app open in two windows, such as browsing two different Web sites or IM chatting to two different people.




Multiple multitasking




For quick and dirty tasks without leaving the app you’re in, some apps can be called up in a corner then sent packing until needed again. These quick access apps include the calculator, phone dialer, and the YouTube app. Put them where you want them — and say how much space you want them to take up — by drawing a box anywhere on the screen. The app pops up, you do a quick sum, send a quick message, or make a quick call, and then minimise it to a small floating icon to return to your main app without missing a beat.


023 SamsungGalaxyTab10.1 35827193 610x407 Samsungs new Galaxy Note 10.1 brings refined design


You can draw a box on the screen and pull up an app to fit in the space you drew.


(Credit:

Sarah Tew/CNET)



The minimised app floats around as a small round icon right at your fingertips, looking suspiciously like a Facebook Chat Head. What’s really clever is you can have as many of these quick apps open or minimised at one time as you like.


Taking on the Tab



Previously, I’ve wondered what’s the point of a 10-inch Galaxy Note when we already have a range of full-size slates in the Galaxy Tab range. But with the Note 10.1′s monstrous processing power, clever multitasking, and nifty S Pen features, I’m starting to wonder if it isn’t the increasingly creaky Tabs that need to justify their existence.


CNET UK editor Luke Westaway contributed to this report.




*http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNHnkIXOuOpP0Iim8fN9rZdD2zA2pw&url=http://reviews.cnet.com/tablets/samsung-galaxy-note-10/4505-3126_7-35827193.html






source : http://techie.id1945.com/2013/09/samsungs-new-galaxy-note-10-1-brings-refined-design/

Thursday, September 5, 2013

First 12 Samsung Galaxy Gear apps revealed, 70 total promised down the line



Samsung Galaxy Gear 1 640x280 First 12 Samsung Galaxy Gear apps revealed, 70 total promised down the line


The October release of the Samsung Galaxy Gear is fast approaching and for those of you who weren’t turned-off by its love-it-or-hate-it design (I think it looks rather snazzy), you might be wondering exactly how “smart” the Galaxy Gear will be when it’s finally released. Because the Galaxy Gear isn’t your typical Android device, it will require developers to create apps specifically for its tiny 1.6-inch display for installation outside of Google Play.


At $300, the Galaxy Gear isn’t exactly affordable, but so far, the response from developers is fair. Samsung is promising over 70 custom made apps will be available for the wearable and while the vast majority of these apps weren’t specifically named, 12 of them were made official. Let’s have a look at the current running list.



  • Atooma – An app that provides an IFTTT like service (if this then that), for automating the device according to different variables. Things like time of day, or location can trigger specific actions.

  • Banjo – A social location-based app, Banjo will alert you when friends are nearby and provide a live stream of pictures taken by friends at a specific event.

  • eBay – The eBay app will help you keep tabs on auctions, providing alerts on bids and ensuring you’re always kept up-to-date on all of your eBay activity.

  • Evernote – Other than an announcement that an Evernote app was in the works, not much else is known. We’re sure it’ll behave much like the Google Glass version of the app, allowing you to quickly save voice notes, snapshots, and providing you with reminders.

  • Glympse – A fitness app that can locate friends via GPS, tracking workout routines much like a Nike Fuel band.

  • Line – Currently the only real messaging client for the Galaxy Gear, Line lets you quickly send instant messages to friends (and even add stickers). It will probably be easier to whip out your phone for instant messaging, but at least it’s an option.

  • MyFitnessPal – Less workout tracking and more of a calorie counter, MyFitnessPal helps you keep track of your diet, while also detecting how active you’ve been during the day.

  • Path – Billed as a “private social network,” Path functions much like Facebook or Google+ with users posting status updates and photos. The Gear app will make this process a little bit easier for all 5 friends on Path.

  • Pocket – Once known as ReadItLater, Pocket is a service that saves interesting articles from around the web. While you wont be doing much web browsing from the Galaxy Gear, the Pocket app will read aloud saved articles making it easy to stay up to date on everything you saved from the internets.

  • RunKeeper – An app for tracking runs, you can record distance, time, and pace, directly from your wrist.

  • TripIt – Like Google Now, TripIt keeps you notified of flights changes, delays, and general takeoff times.

  • Vivino Wine Scanner – Simple app for taking a snapshot of a wine bottle, and immediately identifying it, pulling up a variety of information before you buy.


galaxy gear on wrist1 640x360 First 12 Samsung Galaxy Gear apps revealed, 70 total promised down the line


Like any other device, the Galaxy Gear will need to prove its usefulness for consumers. Keep in mind that while only 12 apps are available right now (and possibly at launch), it’s still off to a better start than competition like the Pebble smartwatch. It’ll be interesting to see how developers take to a new platform, shoehorning robust apps and dumbing them down for the small screen. Like fellow wearable Google Glass, the Galaxy Gear definitely has a lot of potential, but as so often is the case, it’s developer support that will ultimately decide the device’s fate.


[TNW]




*http://phandroid.com/2013/09/05/samsung-galaxy-gear-apps-12-now-70-later/






source : http://techie.id1945.com/2013/09/first-12-samsung-galaxy-gear-apps-revealed-70-total-promised-down-the-line/

App Updates: Google Chrome, Google Games, Facebook, NFL Mobile and more



It has been a crazy week with all sorts of awesome news. From Android 4.4 KitKat, the Samsung Galaxy Gear, Note 3 and more all making headlines. So while you’re all busy watching our IFA hands-on coverage, we figured a quick update on some important applications was in order. There’s plenty of apps getting updates this afternoon, but here are a few big ones.


Screen Shot 2013 04 09 at 1.42.01 PM 540x3391 App Updates: Google Chrome, Google Games, Facebook, NFL Mobile and more


For one Google Play Games was updated last night in the Play Store. Which is Google’s new backend service and gaming platform for leaderboards, multi-player gaming, invites and much more. Similar to Apple’s Game Center. The update was minor and only lists fixes for no-touch accessibility, along with the usual bug fixes and performance improvements, but most likely Google made some behind the scenes improvements as well.


Then Google Chrome got a pretty big update, which finally added some of those features we’ve been seeing in their beta channel. Chrome for Android 29 arriving today brings fixes for issues with WebAudio, fixes for font problems on some devices, and more. Then we’ll enjoy faster startup performance and general stability, along with improved scrolling and a nifty visual indicator when you’ve reached the end of a page.


For all you teens and Facebook fans, their Android app just got a little better for those who love smiley faces and emoticons. Some stickers will now be animated in Facebook Messenger, but this only works on Android 4.0.2 devices and higher. We also got bug fixes, and Facebook Home users can enjoy lockscreen music controls.


Screen Shot 2013 06 04 at 12.36.57 PM 540x443 App Updates: Google Chrome, Google Games, Facebook, NFL Mobile and more


Finally, the NFL Season is here. Starting today we have our first actual regular game on Thursday Night Football. One which I’ll be watching from the airport on my Galaxy S4 with NFL Mobile. Speaking of that, NFL Mobile just got updated as well. Along with all the previous video streaming footage, we can now stream exclusive NFL.com footage. The newly redesigned app lost live game audio coverage, and that’s been returned (for Verizon only), and we can even share news content right to Google+ now.


NFL Mobile is now available for those in Canada, although live video is probably still limited to Verizon only, and Bell Mobile TV customers have access as well. Good stuff all around NFL. Now all we need is this app to be free for NFL Network subscribers. No point in us paying twice. Get any of the above updates from the respective links, or from the Play Store below.


VIA: Google Play Store











*http://androidcommunity.com/app-updates-google-chrome-google-games-facebook-nfl-mobile-and-more-20130905/






source : http://techie.id1945.com/2013/09/app-updates-google-chrome-google-games-facebook-nfl-mobile-and-more/

New Chrome Apps take the Web out of the browser



Pocket Screenshot 610x385 New Chrome Apps take the Web out of the browser

Pocket’s popular read-it-later service is a Chrome App, too.




(Credit:

Google)



Looking at its history, Google’s a betting company. On September 4, 1998, the company bet that the world would want a better search engine. On September 2, 2008, the company bet that people would want a better browser. And on Thursday, the company unveiled a new kind of Chrome App that bets that people want to use Web apps, sans browser.


Chrome Apps, known in development as Chrome Packaged Apps, allow Web developers to turn their sites into single-serving apps that function like more like apps and programs written in native code. The apps are currently available only on Chrome for Windows and Chromebooks running Chrome OS, with

Mac and Linux support in the works.


You can install Chrome Apps from the For your desktop section of the Chrome Web Store.


Until AM Screenshot 610x381 New Chrome Apps take the Web out of the browser

Until AM is an audio-mixing app with hooks to SoundCloud and Google Drive.




(Credit:

Google)



What’s a Chrome App?

“This is the way to deliver native apps for Chrome OS,” said Erik Kay, Chrome’s engineering director who’s worked on the browser since before it launched.


Some of the more notable apps that are available include Pixlr Touch Up for lightweight photo editing; Wunderlist and Google Keep for to-do list management; and games like Spelunky and Tank Riders.


In many ways, Kay explained, the new apps are a mashup between native code and browser development.


The new apps are available offline, have access to lower-level system resources such as Bluetooth and USB, and can interact with digital cameras and other peripherals, which Web sites can’t really do yet. The apps auto-update and leverage Chrome’s sandboxing for security, offer syncing and in-app payments like cloud apps and mobile apps, and can display desktop notifications.


But developers are freed from the design constraints imposed by the browser, said Kay.


“[A Chrome App] has full control over its appearance, down to how it interacts with the system,” he said. That means that developers aren’t dependent on the browser’s chrome, its interface, for how the app looks, and can develop apps that look more like mobile apps.


Chrome Apps Launcher New Chrome Apps take the Web out of the browser

The Chrome Apps launcher and apps will work first on Windows and Chromebooks.




(Credit:

Google)



Chrome Web Apps, which are still available, were little more than “fancy bookmarks,” Kay said.


“Hosted apps were a way to take an existing hosted Web site and wrap it up in a container, bundle some of the HTML5 permissions, and give it a big icon,” he said. “At its core, it was still a Web site.”


Despite initial launch restrictions, the plan is for the app to run wherever Chrome runs. The apps are portable, said Kay, and have a “much more seamless onboarding experience,” he said. “It just works with whatever technologies work in Chrome, [such as] C++ or Native Client.”


Uncertain future for Chrome Apps

Google’s not building Chrome Apps for

Android just yet, although Kay did say that there are Android compatibility plans in the offing.


editor 610x464 New Chrome Apps take the Web out of the browser

Chrome packaged apps are written with the same HTML, CSS, and JavaScript technologies as ordinary Web apps.




(Credit:

Google)



Android and iOS prevent apps from being embedded in other apps, said Kay, so the mechanisms that Chrome Apps use to run on desktops won’t do.


“We’re working with the Cordova project, the open source behind PhoneGap,” he said. Google has been contributing to the project for about a year, including a Chrome Apps API layer. Even with PhoneGap support, Android functionality is a long way off, Kay said.


Also not happening anytime soon is multi-browser support. “Chrome Packaged Apps are specific to the Chrome runtime,” he said. “There’s other browsers that are working on similar things and over time they may standardize, but for now this is Chrome specific.”


Pixlr screenshot 610x343 New Chrome Apps take the Web out of the browser

The Pixlr Chrome App breaks out of the typical browser interface to provide an image editor.




(Credit:

Google)



Chrome Apps represent an unusual, sometimes uncomfortable balancing act between the limits and benefits of the Web. When asked about people who criticize Chrome for encouraging a Chrome-centric view of the browser world, and how they’ll respond to Chrome Apps, Kay strongly defended Chrome’s position.


“Our intent has always been to be a good steward of the Web,” he said, noting that Chrome’s developers work closely with other browser vendors, including competitors at Mozilla, Microsoft, Apple, and Opera. “The difference with Chrome is that things are moving a lot faster, and the competition has been good, to make the Web a better place,” he said.


But Chrome Apps appear to part ways with that goal. On its fifth anniversary of aggressively pushing for better Web standards across the spectrum through Chrome, Google is now also using the Web to build a walled garden within the Web.




*http://news.cnet.com/8301-1001_3-57601428-92/new-chrome-apps-take-the-web-out-of-the-browser/






source : http://techie.id1945.com/2013/09/new-chrome-apps-take-the-web-out-of-the-browser/