Posts Tagged ‘android’

Steam Mobile for iOS And Android

Published by technicalguy on January 27th, 2012 - in Android, Apple, SmartPhone, Technology

steam-mobile

Steam, the online games and gaming community, has released to Beta a Steam app for iOS and Android. The app is live in the Android and iOS app stores.

Steam Mobile sports a set of features that should be familiar to PC gamers, including gaming news feeds and the ability to browse the extensive catalog. It additionally provides up-to-date information about games on sale. It’s also very geared toward communication, as it allows you to keep in touch with your fellow Steam buddies by poking through their profiles or kicking off a mobile chat session.

New Asus / NVIDIA Tablet

Published by technicalguy on January 11th, 2012 - in Tablet, Technology

IMG_5546

At NVIDIA’s press conference today, NVIDIA had a couple little surprises. Little being the word, there — they announced a diminutive 7″ tablet to compete with the likes of the Nook Tablet and Kindle Fire. The price, $249, is certainly competitive. But the tablet itself, the hardware anyway, blows them out of the water.

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The Windows Phone

Published by technicalguy on January 7th, 2012 - in Technology

Apple and Android are the top two players in the Smartphone market right now, but have you given thought to Microsoft’s Windows Phone 7?

windows phone 7

It certainly hasn’t caught on like others but it has a unique interface that will likely appeal to some of you out there. If you’ve never seen the Microsoft Windows Phone 7 interface then try this web-based Virtual Hands On and see what you think.

TechCrunch says “As most who’ve experienced the Windows Phone 7 platform will attest, Microsoft offers something truly unique in terms of OS design and on-screen interaction. Windows Phone 7 offers a superb user experience, indeed far superior to most if not all the Android smartphones.

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Too Many Apps!

Published by technicalguy on December 23rd, 2011 - in SmartPhone, Technology

How many apps do you have on your smartphone? And how many do you actually use on a daily basis?
smartphone apps

There are apparently over 500,000 applications for the iPhone and iPad, more than 300,000 for Android, and thousands more on other platforms. The average smartphone user has 65 apps installed on their phone (source: Flurry). Many of us have more (yes you – I’m looking at you). The increasing problem has become finding the apps you already have installed on your smartphone when you want/need them.

How Many Apps?

How many apps do people actually use? According to Flurry, the average consumer uses only 15 apps per week. How ’bout you? How many do you use? Think about it, that means that the majority of the apps installed on your phone are only used occasionally. These are things like games, tip calculators, calorie counters, garage sale finders, and the like.

The App Problem.

Searching for an app on your device is severely lacking, at least on the two major platforms, iPhone and Android. For example, on an iPhone you can’t pull up Groupon or LivingSocial by typing in “deals” into the iPhone’s Spotlight Search box. It doesn’t work on Android, either – you have to type the app’s name.

However, if the app has optimized its name for search it can work. Type in “recipes” on iPhone and Epicurious appears. But not on Android. Type in “deals” on iPhone, and there comes BiteHunter. Type “Shopping” on iPhone, and there’s FastMall and Zoomingo, but not Target or Best Buy. And, in similar tests on Android, apps have to be searched for by name, not function.

Why is this happening?

Some app makers are better than others at maximizing the on-device search capabilities provided by iOS. That is, they’re stuffing their app’s name with keywords. (Epicurious is actually called “Epicurious Recipes Shopping List,” for example).

This is a problem because search is the quickest way to find apps on your phone. After all, (stock) Android is designed so that you’ll hide most of your apps, only pinning favorites to your homescreen. Meanwhile, iOS addresses the app overload situation with folders.

It would be so much better to have an efficient search mechanism. But even as useful as keyword-based searching is today, given that it ranks results alphabetically, it won’t continue to be as useful in the future. Imagine if that’s how Google ranked the web! Of course, the app store ecosystem is hardly as large as the web and app stores won’t grow to the web’s size. In time, our app addiction will likely also give us “app-ified” mobile experiences designed for the small screen, and built with HTML5. But the app ecosystem is insanely huge and still growing.

Only So Much

In the meantime, we will begin to hit a stopping point with apps – a psychological barrier – not only due to the limited storage space on their phones, but also because we simply can’t deal with a phone that has some 500 or 1,000 apps installed.

We Need A Search Engine

Why not give our devices a real search engine – one that’s as powerful as the app store’s engine, if not better. Apps can be keyword-optimized, ranked and rated by dozens of signals. The on-device app search engine should know what apps you have installed, how often you use them, how long you’ve had them, when you bought them, their ratings, your ratings, which of your friends use them, and everything the apps can and can’t do. We should be able to quickly access those apps we’ve deemed our favorites, whether or not they’re on the device we have now. iCloud is a good first step to this – your favorite apps could be stored in the cloud and surfaced through Spotlight Search. And Google, a company that built the world’s best web search engine, could surely do a better job of building an engine for searching the apps on our phones.

We’re getting to a point where, if this situation doesn’t change, no one will try a new app because they have enough apps already.

What about You?

How do you manage YOUR apps? Do you have some trick, some organization scheme? I try to cluster similar apps on similar pages on my Android Phone.

Image credits: top – Appstream via Appsfire; iPhone apps – Flickr user Karin Beil

Skype For Android – Now Picture And Video Too

Published by technicalguy on December 21st, 2011 - in Android, Technology

skype for android

Finally, Skype has updated their Android app with support for picture and video messages.

The functionality works over WiFi and 3G, so now you can send holiday photos to your Skype contacts over the Christmas period. The update also provides a fix for Tegra 2-powered devices to help with the lower battery life and video quality issues, G2x owners will want this.

Interestingly, Skype’s Dan Chastney also notes a handful of new devices have been whitelisted for Skype video calling, including the unreleased Motorola DROID4. This suggests that Verizon’s next QWERTY-packing handset will be hitting shelves soon.

 

 

The new version of Skype For Android is available in the Android Market so grab it now.

 

Facebook Timeline For Mobile Web and Android

Published by technicalguy on December 19th, 2011 - in Android, Social Media, Technology

Mobile Timeline 2 2 3

Facebook has released Timeline to the entire world, and now you can access some of its features from Facebook for Android 1.8.1 and the HTML5 mobile site m.facebook.com. You can scroll through Timeline posts, photos, and third-party app activity reports. Sometimes you can open the apps themselves. However you cannot change the privacy settings of your posts.

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Search & Move Files Between Your Android, PC & Mac

wyse pocketcloud

Wyse Technology is launching a new app for Android users today called Wyse PocketCloud Explore, which will allow you to search for files you have stored on any phone, tablet, PC or Mac. The app works in conjunction with a software client installed on your computer, so you can perform universal file searches, then view the files, rename them, move them into folders, share them or download them to your device.

The software lets you perform unlimited copying and moving of video, image and audio files between your Windows or Mac computer and your Android device. Meanwhile, other files types can be opened or edited in your preferred Android application (e.g., QuickOffice). You can also choose to email the file via Android’s email client.

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Facebook For Android Has More Users Than iPhone

Published by technicalguy on December 18th, 2011 - in Android, Social Media, Technology

Facebook for Android

For the first time, the Facebook for Android mobile app has eclipsed the daily active user count of Facebook for iPhone. The Android app launched in September 2009 more than a year after the iPhone app. Both are developed by Facebook and the Android app this week started to pull away with 58.3 million DAU compared to the iPhone app’s 57.4 million, according to the AppData tracking service.

With the Android device base growing at 550,000 activations per day and Timeline now available for Android but not yet for iPhone, I expect this gap to widen.

facebook for android
Facebook for Android‘s monthly user count of 85.4 million still lags behind the iPhone app’s 99.1 million MAU. However, this stat isn’t as important as DAU, or stickiness — the percentage of monthly active users that return daily. Android’s stickiness is 68.2%, compaed to iPhone’s 57.9%. This could indicate that Android devices appeal to a younger, more Facebook-engaged audience, or to more hardcore technology users in general. The iPhone’s role as a fashion and status symbol may be drawing less engaged users.

Another explanation for the Android app taking the lead is that Facebook released an official iPad app in October which now has 5.5 million DAU. Though many users likely switched from using the unoptimized iPhone app on their iPad, some probably came from unofficial third-party apps.

Until Facebook for iPhone is updated to support Timeline, some of the app’s users some may stray to the HTML5 mobile site and slow the app’s growth. Meanwhile, Facebook for Android 1.8.1′s ability to access Timeline can help the app grow its lead. For reference, Facebook for BlackBerry has 29.9 million DAU, and Facebook for Windows Phone has 360,000 DAU according to AppData.

User counts of the Facebook apps matter because they can influence where Facebook devotes mobile development resources. For years, features were first released for the iPhone version, possibly because its higher user count made it more of a priority. If the Android app becomes significantly more popular, Timeline might be the first of many features it gets early. [Update: This could set an example for other companies to develop for Android first as well.] And that could sway people choosing what phone to buy.

This is a coming of age moment for Android.

Nook for Android

Published by technicalguy on November 9th, 2011 - in Android, Nook

I tried to download the Nook reader for Android, however I got the message: “the item cannot be installed in your device’s country”. This is for my Bell Samsung GT9000M smartphone.

What’s up Barnes & Noble? Why can’t I read books and magazines here in Canada?

There’s also a lot of comments on the Marketplace page for the Nook for Android update. There seems to be issues with accounts not being recognized and books not being able to be read.

You may want to hold off updating your smartphone until these problems have been resolved.

Don’t you wish your Android phone could…

Published by technicalguy on November 7th, 2011 - in Android

A great article over at Frankie’s Blog lists five things he’s like to see Android devices do.

He has some great ideas and as an Android phone user, and technician, I have an Android phone because I want the freedom to use it the way I want – not the way I’m forced to. (more…)

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