Skip to content

Posts tagged ‘Android’

13
May

Watch Samsung’s Galaxy S6 Edge get blown to pieces with a Desert Eagle


Samsung_Galaxy_S6_Edge_Back_And_Galaxy_Tab_S_Back_TA

Drop tests and unboxing are commonplace on YouTube, but how about videos where smartphones get shot with a Desert Eagle? That’s a bit more unique.

In this video, YouTube channel Unbox Therapy brings us a Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge, covered in dbrand‘s carbon fiber skin, against the Desert Eagle. I think you’ve got a pretty good idea of what happens. But, shot in 4K with the Phantom Flex4K Ultra HD video camera, this is some of the most beautiful destruction you’ll see, especially if you’re, well, watching it in 4K. Take a look for yourself:

Click here to view the embedded video.

I’m not sure which is more enjoyable. The Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge getting blown up with a Desert Eagle or a hole being shot through the iPhone 5S with a 50 caliber sniper rifle.

Come comment on this article: Watch Samsung’s Galaxy S6 Edge get blown to pieces with a Desert Eagle

13
May

A retro-gamer’s survival guide: 7 games to feed your nostalgia


retro Android games old school

Just last week, a friend and I were reminiscing of the so called glory days of gaming, i.e. the 8-Bit and 16-Bit days. In particular, I offered the point that what was once the last bastion of old-school, portables, had now reached a state that they were little more than handheld versions of the “next gen” hardware we used just a decade ago. In short, software programmer’s prerogative to do more with less has been done away with, and now developing something as “simple” as a Nintendo 3DS game takes considerable effort if someone wants their product to be seen as “good”. This goes double for smartphone and tablets, where specs rival those of many PCs.

As a self-proclaimed “retro gamer”, I am endlessly on the lookout for anything and everything that might spur a flashback to the extraordinary imaginative worlds that once existed. Not on screen mind you, but in my mind: games like the original Metroid were anything but “detailed”, yet the simplicity allowed you to fill in the details. While there are some fantastic products on the Google Play Store, if you are like me, chances are you’ve seen all the “big names” and either played through them or else skipped them entirely.

What I am about to share, then, may be of great interest to all those who are dissatisfied with the mainstream market. I have created a list of games that are oddly obscure despite being so darn awesome. With that, I give you the list.


Evoland ($4.99)

This game is nothing short of a masterpiece. In many ways, the concept behind it is similar to the “Gaia Trilogy” on the SNES, specifically Soul Blazer and Terranigma, yet it is also a pastiche of the entire JRPG genre, from past-to-present. The game begins with a small rectangle of black-and-white visibility akin to something you would find back on the original GameBoy. As the game progresses, you find treasure chests that slowly but surely evolve the world into a modern game. 16-bit colors, 3D graphics, monsters, magic, NPCs, dungeons… it’s literally as if you were playing a graphic version of a game development timeline.

I was absolutely blown away with the amount of effort that was put into this product, and couldn’t recommend it more. The price tag might be a bit steep for those more apt to the freemium model, but suffice to say it’s well spent. Several of the comments mention the game’s short length, but the ability to relive your childhood and the evolution of the RPG genre itself is something that can only be described as priceless.

You can find Evoland here.


Space Expedition ($0.99)

This sci-fi game has a typical setup: the main character is sent to a seemingly innocuous planet to investigate what happened to a research team gone missing. The adventure itself is relatively simple but contains some tension and challenge while offering a story that develops as the mission progresses, and even includes hidden items to find. Though it looks like the app would make for a pretty mean Metroid-clone, it’s much more straightforward. Fortunately the next game…

You can find Space Expedition here.


Super Space Adventure (Free, IAP)

Perhaps the single-most true homage to Metroid that has ever been made, this game can only be described as incredible. The main character begins the game with nothing more than a jet pack. Just as with Metroid, you must find various power-ups along the way to allow access to larger and more expansive parts of the world. The only down side is the lack of music (sound effects are present, however), though it shouldn’t be too difficult to search for “Metroid Soundtrack” and set up some adequate background music.

The game allows you to play the first portion absolutely for free, after which there will be an IAP to allow access to the remainder of the world map.

Get your Metroid homage on by clicking here.


VVVVVV ($2.99)

This diamond in the rough was just discovered last night, and indeed I’m still smirking over it. Picture, if you will, the recent spade of “gravity” based games, the likes of which usually consist of an endless runner scenario. Now imagine this concept as applied to a “Metroidvania” world map and featuring music in the style of Mega Man. You are the Captain of an interstellar ship. After a disaster occurs, you must rescue your crew who have all been scattered around the area. There are no enemies, but there are instant deaths. Thousands of them. The game’s very title is a reference to the spikes that litter most of the rooms in the game.

Start your spike insanity by downloading it here.


Super Gravitron (Free)

This game isn’t so much “epic” as it is a novelty. Similar to how iOS has “The Last Rocket” and its semi-sequel “Flip’s Escape”, Super Gravitron is a “spin-off” of sorts to VVVVVV. In the vein of a classic arcade game, you must avoid an endless stream of obstacles that come at the Captain from either side. I’ve yet to survive longer than 4.5 seconds despite playing for a good ten minutes. The incredible chiptune music ensures that you want to keep playing to hear more, and the presence of awards for reaching survival accomplishments (the first being 5 seconds) means you are always almost there.

You can download Super Gravitron here.


DLB (Free)

The third game by Terry Cavanagh, this app is somewhat akin to an “endless runner” type setup, as evident by the name, “Don’t Look Back”. The graphics are reminiscent of the early NES-days, and for some reason “Bart Simpson’s: Escape from Camp Deadly” for the original Game Boy comes to mind. Very simple controls and gameplay make for a very nice bit of nostalgia.

Find DLB here.


8bit Doves ($2.99)

This is a game that is heavily inspired by some serious love of the Game Boy. It’s actually very cute while at the same time being incredibly difficult. The goal is to guide your player character along the various maps, but due to the control set-up, things are anything but easy: the crux of the game play revolves around your being a “bird” and thus having to fly. If you had trouble with Flappy Bird, this isn’t going to be a ride in the park either, though at least the nostalgia factor present is enough to justify the purchase. A more “basic” version called “Endless Doves” is also available, and for free at that.

8bit Doves can be downloaded from the Play Store by clicking here.


So, there you have it. 7 games that you probably had never heard of, yet all will (hopefully) tickle the old-school gamer in your heart. Be sure to leave a comment below with any feedback or other suggestions for anything I might have missed.



13
May

Google’s Android-for-all program comes to Europe


General Mobile 4G for AndroidOne

Google’s bid to democratize Android just reached Europe. The internet giant has announced that Turkey will get its first Android One smartphone, the General Mobile 4G, on May 15th. The device is strictly middling given its 5-inch 720p display, Snapdragon 410 processor, 13-megapixel rear camera and 5-megapixel front cam, but it will be the first Android One device to offer LTE. It’s fairly affordable, too, at about $263 contract-free. There’s no mention of where Google’s initiative will go next, but the company hints that Turkey might not be the last European nation to get an Android One phone — you may eventually find one sitting in a shop near you.

Filed under: Cellphones, Mobile, Google

Comments

Source: Google Turkey

13
May

The most important feature for a phone


E

very time a new phone is announced, it seems like it has more features packed into it than the last phone. This constant addition of new features to phones has been going on for a long time, but does it add anything of value to a phone? We have seen companies add things to phones that are totally pointless, but the companies do not seem to care. Consumers do not seem to care either, if they even notice or use the new features at all. However, they begin to complain when their phone slows down or they cannot find something because it has been hidden beneath all those added features. Hopefully this will get phone manufacturers to realize something extremely important, user experience is the most important feature you can put in your phone. We are going to look at some companies that have begun putting the experience of using their product first.

Samsung

Galaxy-S6-Vs-S6-EdgeThe most prominent example that comes to mind is Samsung. Since the original Galaxy S came out in 2010, Samsung kept adding features to it’s Galaxy S series until it seemed to get out of hand. Many of these features were completely useless – I’m looking at you “Eye Scroll” (pun intended) – but consumers kept buying the latest and greatest from Samsung. However, people began to complain when their originally super fast Galaxy phone became sluggish and laggy before their two-year contract was up.

When the S5 was released, something happened that caused Samsung to rethink their strategy…sales declined rapidly. Customers were no longer happy with new, useless features and began to switch to other phones. This year, Samsung released the S6 and the tech world noticed something completely different about this phone. The useless features were cut, the software was streamlined, and they focused on user experience more than anything else. Samsung focused on delivering what customers had been begging for, which was an updated UI and better build quality. The removal of expandable storage and replaceable battery did upset some of the hardcore users, but for the mass crowd, it brought with it the premium design and fluid performance they had been asking for. By doing this, the Galaxy S6 and its curved companion have received great reviews and promising sales numbers, two things that Samsung desperately needs.

Motorolamoto x (2014)

Motorola might not have the most sales or highest profits, but their Moto X phones have been praised by the tech community on being the easiest to operate and having useful features. The 2013 and 2014 Moto X’s were not cutting edge in the spec department, but Motorola focused more on creating a better user experience rather than faster speeds. That being said, the Moto X is still fast and fluid even though it is running on old hardware.

Motorola also focused on adding features that people would actually find useful. Active Display and Moto Voice are two added goodies of the Moto X that make it really stand out. Not only that, but they are useful daily. When I owned the 2013 Moto X, I used Moto Voice constantly because it was so much easier to talk to my phone than type into it. Keeping the software near stock also allows Motorola to have updates for their phones ready before other competitors. The 2013 Moto X was one of the first devices to run KitKat, even beating some Nexus devices. The Moto X’s clean interface and simple user experience makes it a phone that can last you a full two years.

Google

Nexus 6 on Motorola.comGoogle has been making strides over the last few years to make Android simpler to use and easier on the eyes. The last three Android iterations (JellyBean, KitKat, and Lollipop) have each improved drastically over the last. Android has become much smoother and more fluid to use, with lag being reduced almost completely.

Lollipop introduced the most visually appealing (at least to most) update to Android we have ever seen. It focused on looking cleaner and being easier to understand and use. Google’s new design language “Material Design” focuses completely on letting people know where things come from and how to move within apps. It has not been perfect, but it is nice to see Google focusing heavily on user experience. Not only have they made Android much easier to use, but it is also much more fun to use. All of the animations and transitions that happen when you tap different things makes the whole operating system seem alive.

Features are great and help differentiate phones, but when they come before the user experience, then there is a problem. Now that phone specs have reached the level of desktop PCs, we will hopefully start seeing manufacturers focus on their user experience more. Those companies that like to put heavy skins on top of Android need to work on keeping it fluid and offering features that are actually useful. Features for the sake of features is pointless, and will not help a phone or customer in any way. Do you agree that user experience is ultimately most important or is another feature worth more to you? Tell us down in the comments!

The post The most important feature for a phone appeared first on AndroidGuys.

13
May

Google delivers news headlines to your Apple Watch


Google News & Weather on an Apple Watch

If you were gutsy enough to buy an Apple Watch on launch, you’ve likely been asking a common question: where are the Watch-savvy Google apps? Well, one of them is finally here… although it’s probably not the one you want. The search firm has updated Google News & Weather with support for Apple’s wearable, so you now have a quick way to scan major headlines from your wrist. It’s definitely convenient, although these tidbits take a while to load and don’t include the “weather” part of the iOS app. However, the real question is when the Google apps that you’re likely to use will show up. It’d be great to dictate Hangouts messages or triage an overflowing Gmail inbox.

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Via: ZDNet

Source: App Store

13
May

Google, Nestlé come together again to stamp YouTube’s name on 600,000 KitKat packages


Nestlegfgl_c30m9y80 [Converted]

The relationship between Google and Nestlé remains as strong as its ever been. Google released Android 4.4 in 2013 and applied the KitKat name, a product that Nestlé owns and licenses to Hershey in the United States. Now the two are back together to replace the KitKat name with YouTube’s on more than 600,000 packages in the United Kingdom. It is all part of Nestlé’s ‘Celebreate the Breakers Break’ campaign. Also, searching “YouTube my break” on a mobile device will return results with the top four videos trending from around the world. Google and Nestlé want people to make the most of their unused time.

nestle_youtube_break_package

Click here to view the embedded video.

Source: Nestlé

Come comment on this article: Google, Nestlé come together again to stamp YouTube’s name on 600,000 KitKat packages

12
May

BitTorrent’s messaging service goes wide, adds ephemeral options


Last we heard of BitTorrent’s chat client, Bleep, it was just debuting. Today the news is that the secure messaging client is moving from open alpha to a release aimed at the general Android and iOS owning public. With it comes peer-to-peer messaging with the ability to communicate — even sending messages to friends who are offline — no servers required, which theoretically means no threat of hacking. Perhaps the biggest new feature is an ephemeral option called “whispers” for evaporating messages. Unlike Snapchat, though, you can choose on a message by message basis which texts or photos you send will evaporate after 25 seconds. It isn’t an all or nothing affair here. And to further distance itself from the ghostly messaging service, you can even send these from a computer. BitTorrent says with whispers you can swap back and forth between them and normal messages seamlessly without breaking the flow of conversation too.

There’s protection against screenshotting too. Say a pal captures a particularly sensitive back-and-forth that you’d rather not see the light of day. In that case, usernames are blocked out, but text remains. If they want to reveal who was in on the conversation, only the usernames show and the conversation blurs out. The outfit stresses that both the text and usernames won’t be viewable simultaneously, as you can see below.

Free, end-to-end encrypted calling is on offer as well in case you want to keep your voice conversations private too. Maybe best of all? The firm says that no personal information is required to sign up, all you need to do to use the client is supply a username.

Filed under: Cellphones, Software, Mobile

Comments

Source: BitTorrent

12
May

Nexus 9 Android 5.1.1 factory image arrives, OTA file captured too!


Nexus 9-32

Last week was a big one for the Nexus 9, after the neglected tablet finally saw an update first to Android 5.0.2 and then later in the week began receiving an OTA to 5.1.1.

If you have yet to get your hands on 5.1.1 for the Nexus 9 tablet, you have three options. Option 1, you can keep waiting until the OTA hits. Option 2, you can now download the official factory image and do a clean wipe and installation of Android 5.1.1. For those that don’t want to wait for the OTA but don’t want to have to do a full factory wipe either, you also have a third option: You can down the OTA link, as it has now been captured and made available for your sideloading pleasure!

  • Nexus 9 factory image
  • Nexus 9 OTA capture 

    .rvs_wrapper
    width: 335px;

    .rvs_wrapper.align_left
    float: left;

    .rvs_wrapper.align_right
    float: right;

    .rvs_wrapper.align_center,
    .rvs_wrapper.align_none
    width: 100%;

    .rvs_wrapper.align_center
    text-align: center;

    .rvs_wrapper.align_center.cbc-latest-videos ul li
    float: none;
    display: inline-block;
    vertical-align: top;

    .rvs_wrapper.cbc-latest-videos:not(.align_none) ul li:nth-child(2n+1)
    clear: both;

    .rvs_title
    font-weight: 600 !important;
    margin: 0 !important;

    .rvs_wrapper.align_right .rvs_title
    padding-left: 20px;

    .rvs_title a
    font-family: ‘Roboto Condensed’;
    color: #3a3a3a;

    .rvs_wrapper.cbc-latest-videos ul
    padding-top: 10px;

    .rvs_wrapper.align_left.cbc-latest-videos ul li,
    .rvs_wrapper.align_none.cbc-latest-videos ul li
    padding: 0 15px 0 0;

    .rvs_wrapper.align_right.cbc-latest-videos ul li
    padding: 0 0 0 15px;
    float: right;

    .rvs_wrapper.align_center.cbc-latest-videos ul li
    padding: 0 7px;

    .rvs_wrapper.cbc-latest-videos ul li > a
    font-weight: 400;

    .rvs_wrapper.cbc-latest-videos ul li > a .yt-thumbnail
    margin-bottom: 0;

    @media only screen and (max-width : 480px)
    .rvs_wrapper
    width: 100%;
    text-align: center;

    #page .rvs_wrapper.cbc-latest-videos ul li
    padding: 0 7px;
    display: inline-block;
    float: none;
    vertical-align: top;

For those unfamiliar with flashing a Nexus image, you’ll want to check out our guide. While the guide was written with Android 5.0 in mind, the same basic steps still apply. Of course it is important to note that while flashing is rather safe if you follow instructions properly, things can go wrong if you don’t — and so you should proceed at your risk.

For those on Android 5.1.1 already, what do you think of the update so far?



11
May

AT&T’s first self-branded tablet is built for the budget crowd


AT&T Trek HD tablet

Hey, Verizon: you’re not the only US carrier that can play the in-house tablet game. AT&T has unveiled the Trek HD, the network’s first self-branded slate. The 8-inch Android design isn’t exactly flagship-class, but it might hit the spot if you want LTE data on the cheap. You’re getting a modest 1.6GHz quad-core Snapdragon 400 processor, 5-megapixel rear and 2-megapixel front cameras, 16GB of expandable storage and an 8-hour battery. It does ship with Lollipop out of the box, though, and the price is certainly right — you’re looking at $50 on contract, or $200 over a 20-month installment plan. If all you want is a way to check Facebook when you’re on vacation, you’ll probably be fine.

Filed under: Tablets, Mobile, AT&T

Comments

Source: AT&T

11
May

Google suspends Map Maker service after digital vandalism


Google is suspending Map Maker, the service that allows anyone to contribute to Google Maps, following a prank submission that showed the Android mascot urinating on an Apple logo. When the mapping mischief was first discovered, most of us had a good chuckle and wondered who was responsible. Inevitably, Google took it down and later confirmed that it was a user-created edit, which raised questions about Map Maker’s review policies.

The service uses a mixture of “Google Reviewers” and trusted users to moderate Map Maker contributions, but clearly the setup has some flaws. As such, Google has already suspended auto-approval and user moderation, instead relying on manual checks from its in-house team. The company says it’s quickly accrued a huge backlog of user-contributed edits, so while it develops a new moderation system, it’s suspending public submissions entirely. It’ll come into effect from May 12th and while Google says it’s “a temporary situation,” it’s also admitted that it’ll take more than a few days to fix.

Filed under: Internet, Google

Comments

Source: Google Product Forums