Skip to content

Posts tagged ‘App’

12
Dec

Google+ for Android update brings search and notification improvements, holiday cheer


Following last month’s update to enhance locations and photos, the folks in Mountain View are rolling out version 4.2.4 of Google+ for Android today. Added features this time around include the ability to search everything from the same box and content browsing by category from the What’s Hot stream. Notifications get a tweak as well, allowing users to control who’s able to buzz them immediately by adjusting “Who can notify me” in the settings menu. Finally, to show you’re in the proper seasonal spirit, shaking your device now adds animated snow to an open photo via Auto Awesome. A second shake will save the image for posterity. The updated software is making its way to Google Play “gradually,” so check back later if it’s not snowing… er, showing up just yet.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Source: Vic Gundotra (Google+), Google Play

12
Dec

Waze speeds up its sat nav app with quicker search and simpler interface


Even though Waze is now under Google’s umbrella, it’s continued to operate as if nothing has changed, other than the fact that it now has a billion dollars. To that end, it’s just rolled out a new release for Android and iOS with some welcome new features, most significantly an auto-complete function for addresses and categories that plays well with its new Google search powers. Other goodies include a redesigned main menu, easier waypoint editing and new icons on the map view to see traffic reports or nearby pals. Hopefully, other than borrowing its tech, Google will continue to leave the new acquisition alone — after all, how many apps let you be guided around by a celebrity?

Comments

Source: Waze

12
Dec

‘LEGO Star Wars: The Complete Saga’ Arrives in U.S. App Store [iOS Blog]


Warner Bros. Entertainment and TT Games’ LEGO Star Wars: The Complete Saga, a part of the popular LEGO series of video games, has arrived in the App Store.

The game is a combination of two games released in 2005 and 2006 called LEGO Star Wars and LEGO Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy and is credited with not only revitalizing the LEGO brand, but also kicking off the successful LEGO video game series.

LEGO Star Wars is a 3D platforming game that involves light puzzles in levels that re-tell the stories of all six Star Wars films, allowing players to play as characters such as Obi-Wan Kenobi, Luke Skywalker, Han Solo, Darth Vader and over 100 others.

While the game doesn’t include iOS game controller support, it does, like the other LEGO games, allow users to use either the “classic” or “touch” control scheme.

legostarwars

36 STORY MODE LEVELS + BONUS CONTENT

From the Trade Federation’s “negotiations” with Obi-Wan Kenobi and Qui-Gon Jinn in The Phantom Menace to the space battle above Endor in Return of the Jedi, play the most memorable and exhilarating scenes from your favorite episodes. Also unlock special bonus content featuring Bounty Hunter missions, a special Challenge Mode, Arcade Levels, and more!

OVER 120 CHARACTERS

Play as your favorite Jedi Knight or Sith Lord! There are over 120 playable characters to unlock, including Luke Skywalker, Darth Vader, Han Solo, and Boba Fett.

FORCE POWERS

Which side of the Force will you use? Both dark and light side characters have their own unique Force abilities. Will you use a Force Throw to defeat the Jedi or choose your Lightsaber and Force Push to take down the evil Empire?

LEGO STYLE GAMEPLAY

Smash objects into LEGO bricks and switch characters on the fly as you play through different story levels. Create your own Star Wars character mash-ups like Han Windu and Lando Amidala!

DYNAMIC CONTROL STYLES

Switch between “Classic” and “Touch Screen” controls to find the play-style that suits you best

LEGO Star Wars: The Complete Saga is available in the App Store for free. Episode 1 is a free download, but Episode II to Episode VI are in-app purchases. [Direct Link]

    



12
Dec

Google brings flight, hotel and restaurant reservations to Maps for iOS


If you fancy yourself a jetsetter, fine-diner, or, er, traveling salesman and happen to use an iDevice, Google has some good news for you. The latest update to Maps on iOS brings some of Google Now’s functionality into the company’s navigation app. Search for your restaurant, departing airport or hotel, and the application will auto-populate with your plans — so long as the confirmations were sent to your linked Gmail account. Sure, it’s similar to what the outfit added to Maps’ desktop version earlier this year (pictured above), but since when was feature parity a bad thing?

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Source: iTunes

12
Dec

Google updates Keep web app, goes overboard with the Santa references


Santa Tracker has clearly made its mark on Google — things in Mountain View are beginning to look a lot like Christmas. But then, it’s probably much too difficult to resist the urge to sprinkle in a few references to Kris Kringle in a post detailing updates to your list-making app. And surely many a holiday gift giver will be pleased with the tweaks to the Web version of Keep, including full-color notes, text scaling, new fonts and the ability to rearrange lists. Search has also been improved and Google’s brought over a navigation drawer for switching between archived and active notes. Now Merry Christmas to all and so on and so forth.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Source: Google+, Google Play

11
Dec

Gmail for Android gets a vacation responder, printing and universal attachment support


Gmail 4.7 for Android

Many workers are about to leave on holiday trips, and Google is more than willing to help them avoid the office with an updated Gmail app for Android. The new release includes a vacation responder that will let fellow employees know that you’re off the clock. If you’re running Android 4.4 KitKat, you can also print email to avoid checking your phone during family gatherings. And if you simply must deal with that company report right away, you’ll be glad to know that Gmail now supports file attachments of all types. The new app is gradually rolling out as of this writing, so don’t be disappointed if you have to wait a little while for an upgrade.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Via: Gmail (Google+)

Source: Google Play

11
Dec

Why the UK’s Department of Health is spending millions of pounds on mobile gaming


Today sees the release of The Walk, an iOS and Android game backed by the UK’s Department of Health. It’s the second release in a collection of apps funded as part of the UK’s Small Business Research Initiative (SBRI). The first — StepJockey, an app that lets you map, locate, rate and log the calorific expenditure of staircases around your city — came out on Monday. All five apps in the program encourage you to move more, or change negative habits. Can an app improve your life? At the very least, we’re guessing the Department of Health — having just spent £2 million on this round of investment — thinks so. This is part of a growing trend, that could see government agencies in the UK taking a leaf out of Silicon Valley’s book when it comes to solving (health) problems. Read past the break to find out why it’s putting so much money on third-party digital initiatives.

Your mission is simple, ensure safe transit of a package from Inverness, to Edinburgh — and in the process save the world. Only one problem: a terrorist attack has rendered all motorised transport unusable — you’ll have to go on foot. That’s the premise behind The Walk. The concept isn’t complicated — encourage players to preambulate in the real world as part of an apocalyptic game narrative. Your phone’s accelerometer tracks your movements, unlocking levels and hours of story-telling audio which drive the plot along. Simple, fun, effective. The game’s predecessor (Zombies, Run!) uses similar mechanics, and currently encourages over 750,000 would-be Shauns (or Eds) to escape pursuing Zombies whenever they go for a jog. By lowering the requirement to walking, it’s hoped almost everyone can benefit this time. The focus is on increasing general daily movement, rather than dedicated, prescribed and sometimes prohibitive training routines.

There’s no question the theory is simple: apps that encourage activity, or responsible drinking, could cut down on healthcare requirements through prevention, negating the need for cure. In turn, it could also take a bite out of the estimated £8 billion that obesity and alcohol related diseases cost the UK’s health service each year. More interesting, is that the Department of Health is funding external mobile start-ups and indie developers at all. We asked it why, and were told it’s just as much about nurturing innovative ideas (where they can compete with more conventional fitness apps such as Nike+, MapMyFitness and Adidas miCoach) as it is about encouraging lifestyle change.

The motivation might initially be the potential (and hard to quantify) savings through a healthier public. But using apps to achieve this is an idea the US government is curious about also. The UK’s Department of Health claims it’s also about the broader goal of encouraging jobs and economic growth. By supporting projects like The Walk or StepJockey – apps that otherwise might not have the resources and reach that government backing can allow — it hopes they stand a better chance of gaining traction with the public. Perhaps most significantly, though, the government is encouraging left field thinking, about problems that the larger sport brands have typically thrown money at internally, namely how to get us to move more (and buy their products to do so).

The Department of Health isn’t just funding apps, either. It’s currently also offering a £3.6-million prize-pool for technology-based kidney care solutions. The criteria simply being that it must be able to be used in either the home, community or in secondary care. This is a move we’re more used to seeing in silicon valley, such as Google’s approach to bug finding/fixing, but with perhaps slightly more far-reaching outcomes for humanity as a whole. For Six to Start (the company that developed The Walk), however, the backing is validation of an idea. For the advocates of gamification, it’s rare vindication by the government, and for global brands like Nike/Adidas? It’s a bit of a kick up the butt. For us? We’ve just taken our first steps into The Walk, but already we can see how apps like this could encourage the general public to at least think about adding in a few more daily footsteps. Unarguably in the right direction, too.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Source: Department of Health, The Walk (Google Play), iTunes

11
Dec

Google’s Play Books now supports ebook uploads from any Android device


Google just made it easier to transfer virtual libraries to Play Books, now that you can upload digital tomes straight from Android phones or tablets. Thanks to the software’s latest update, there’s no need to go the Play website to add EPUB or PDF files to your account. Simply click an ebook through an Android file manager — or download it if it’s attached to an email — to get the “Upload to Play Books” prompt. The refreshed app also promises to open files more quickly and smoothly, although we didn’t notice any significant upgrade in speed when we tested it out. Other than these two changes, the latest version lets you read any book in landscape mode and comes with the ability to dismiss recommended titles. Finally, you can now take the reader’s brightness down a notch to make reading in the dark easier for the eyes.

Filed under: , , ,

Comments

Source: Google Play Books

11
Dec

Twitter update takes on Snapchat with direct message photos, improved alerts


Well, it’s not quite the dramatic redesign Twitter experimented with then largely scrapped, but today’s update to its mobile apps still packs a pretty decent punch. For one, you can finally share images via direct message, which has until now been…

11
Dec

Google Drive for iOS finally lets you sort files


The little handy dongle that is the Chromecast isn’t the only product Google is improving today. And while this newly added functionality to Drive on iOS may not be as notable as 10 shiny apps, we’re sure avid users of the storage service will hap…