Showing posts with label apps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label apps. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

S.O.S App Turns Smartphone Into Emergency Beacon


Discovery News - We have all this amazing technology at hand and yet when disaster strikes, communications get disrupted, hampering rescue efforts. A new system in development would turn smartphones into smart emergency beacons, helping responders find victims.
Computer scientists in Germany are currently testing out a lightweight, ad-hoc S.O.S. system for smartphones that would work even if network service in the area goes down. The team, led by Amro Al-Akkad, a research associate at the Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Information Technology, was inspired by events like the 2010 Haiti earthquake and the Fukushima disaster in Japan.
They noticed that wireless network names alone can be used to convey short messages. For example “Pay4YourOwnInternet” and “ThanksForNotSmokingOnTheBalcony,” Al-Akkad told me.
He and his colleagues, including Alexander Boden and Leonardo Ramirez, decided to leverage those names, called Service Set Identifiers or SSID. Their system turns smartphones into wireless network beacons (video) that don’t need existing cellular networks or public Wi-Fi. Victims can use their unique network IDs to convey brief messages like “I’m stuck inside bus” to first responders in the immediate area who carry devices scanning for that info.   Read More

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

20 great apps for your new iOS device - Great starting apps for iOS

CNET - If you're one of the lucky people who received a new iOS device over the holidays, we have a great collection of iOS apps to get you started. There are both free and paid apps here, but all are tried and true selections for everything from gaming and movie making to photography and cooking. Without further ado, make sure your Apple account is set up with the App Store first, then get your iOS device ready for downloading and browse some of my favorite apps for new devices in this slideshow.
This is in no way a definitive list of the best or most essential apps to download, but simply a collection of great titles to get you started with your new iOS device.

View The Apps!

Looking for apps for a new Android device? Sarah Mitroff has a great starter collection forAndroid apps here.

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Find out how long the line is at airport security before you go


Web app or iPhone app WhatsBusy predicts how long it'll take to get through airport security so you can plan your departure accordingly.

CNET - I do not enjoy air travel. Of the many aspects I dislike -- the potential for exploding during takeoff, middle seats in coach, turbulence, the person in front of you fully reclining for the entire flight, the potential for crashing during landing -- there is one I must face before I even leave the house: the anxiety about getting caught in a miles-long security line at the airport and missing my flight. Perhaps for my next trip that requires a flight, WhatsBusy can reduce my anxiety a bit -- at least until I get to the gate and begin to think about getting on the plane.

WhatsBusy is available as a Web app or an iPhone app, and it predicts the wait you'll encounter when you arrive at the airport. WhatsBusy states that its "forecasts are made with real data, not social media check-ins or tweets. We analyze things like things like weather, demographics, and events to predict crowdiness at your favorite places."   Read More

Saturday, October 19, 2013

The 11 Best Astronomy Apps For Amateur Star Gazers

Business Insider - It can be very difficult to identify planets, stars, and clusters at home from your backyard, especially if you are a beginner.

But hey, there's an app for that, of course. Astronomy apps are making it possible for anyone to be astronomer — you don't even need a telescope.

The apps use the GPS and compass in your phone to pinpoint your location and show you where all the surrounding celestial bodies are, even if your view is blocked. Most of the apps don't even need an Internet connection to function so you can take them on camping trips.
Just open the app, point your smartphone at the sky, and the app will identify the planets and stars around you.

We've browsed through some of the top-rated astronomy apps and put together a list of the ones that look the most awesome. Whether you are an aspiring astronomer or just a casual backyard stargazer, these 11 apps can help you locate planets, stars, and galaxies — no telescope required.

SkySafari shows you a map of the sky one million years into the past or future.

 

SkySafari shows you a map of the sky one million years into the past or future.

Mac App Store
App: SkySafari (Buy it for iOS here or Android here)
Price: $4.99

SkySafari can display a map of the sky from any location and shows how positions of celestial bodies change up to one million years into the past or future. It uses images collected from NASA spacecraft and the Hubble Space Telescope to show you the major planets and moons in the solar system. The app also gets you a subscription to SkyWeek: a magazine that tells you about upcoming eclipses and meteor showers.
---

Starmap provides a list of suggested celestial bodies to observe each night.

 

Starmap provides a list of suggested celestial bodies to observe each night.

App Store
App: Starmap (Buy it for iOS here)
Price: $4.99

Starmap has about 350,000 stars, 150 galaxies and clusters, and 50 asteroids and dwarf planets. The app gives you the "night's best selection" so you know what you should be looking for on any given night and it identifies shooting star zones. This app is also a point and locate that uses the iPhone's compass to identify the planets and stars right in front of you. You can zoom in on a particular object and the app has a night vision mode — the backlight on your phone dims and the images on the screen glow red so your night vision isn't ruined.

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Chrome packaged apps power up, snag enhanced iTunes and Bluetooth 4.0 capabilities


PCWorld - Who needs Windows? Soon, you'll be able to use Chrome-based standalone apps to communicate with a Fitbit, sort through an iTunes music library, and pay for in-app purchases via Google Wallet. Google recently announced a slew of updates and additions to the APIs (application programming interfaces) available to developers making packaged apps for Google’s browser.


You may not have heard of packaged apps, as they're currently still in the development stages. Packaged apps are built on top of Chrome using Web technologies such as HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. The big difference between packaged apps and regular Chrome apps is that packaged apps are standalone programs that operate in a separate window and can—crucially—run offline. 

They are also stripped of all the typical browser “chrome” such as the URL address bar and tabs, to more closely resemble a typical PC application. 

The developer preview of Chrome's packaged app launcher 
running in Windows.
Packaged apps will give Google the ability to invade the traditional desktop with its own selection of Chrome-based apps that aren’t dependent specifically on Linux, OS X, or Windows.  More

Sunday, July 7, 2013

8 Apps You Need for Summer Travel Plans


CNET - Between flight delays, crowded airports, and juggling luggage, travel can be stressful. But with a little planning, you can make your trip a little easier from start to finish. So rather than gathering up a collection of apps that just help you book flights, I decided to make a different kind of travel collection.

Packing Pro ($2.99) gets you ready for your big trip before you leave by making sure you'll have everything you need while away from home.

If you like to make lists, this app is a dream come true for planning a vacation. You start by creating your trip entry, then add everything from pretrip preparations to every item of clothing you're going to need -- all by choosing each item from an exhaustive premade list.

View the Rest!

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Vehicle Diagnostics by Delphi - Track your car's location and health


Verizon Wireless 
 
The good: The Vehicle Diagnostics system keeps track of your car's location and fuel level, and sends alerts for maintenance issues. Users can access data on the Web or through a smartphone app.

The bad: Without an existing Verizon data plan, it costs $35 per month to run the Vehicle Diagnostics system. It does not track fuel economy.

The bottom line: Delphi's Vehicle Diagnostics system works best as a tool for parents who let their kids drive the family car, as it shows the car location and will trigger an alert if the car leaves a proscribed area.

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Windows 8.1 in-depth hands-on: features, apps, impressions and screenshots


Engadget - The last time we wrote about Windows 8.1, we had lots to talk about, but very little to share in the way of hands-on impressions. You see, though Microsoft unveiled loads of new features, apps and UI tweaks, it only released a handful of screenshots -- and nobody outside the company was permitted to actually use the new software. Today, though, the OS update is available for anyone to download for free; in fact, because we're oh-so special, we've playing around with it for about 15 hours already. So while that's not enough time to put together a comprehensive review, we feel qualified to offer a few early thoughts. If you're curious, you can meet us after the break for impressions on everything from the new panorama capture feature to Xbox Radio. And yes, we brought screenshots this time. Lots of 'em.

Getting started

 

First things first: a disclosure. Because we started testing Windows 8.1 before it was actually available in the Windows Store, we had to borrow a Surface Pro from Microsoft with the software installed, similar to the way we routinely call in loans on review units. By the time you're reading this, though, the preview will be live in the Windows Store; all you'll have to do is hit download and let your system take care of the rest. As it happens, we expect it will be very hard to miss the download prompt in the store: Microsoft intends to add a "Windows 8.1 Preview is here" note even on individual app download pages. So even if it's the Vevo app you're after, you might still see a prompt to update the OS. Oh, and this might be a good time to give you a heads-up about apps: not all of them will run properly on Windows 8.1, at least not in the beginning. Microsoft says that's simply a function of the operating system still being in its preview phase. Ultimately, company reps say, the goal is for every app to run properly on 8.1, no exceptions.

Return of the Start button

 

Yes, as you may have heard, the Start button is back in Windows 8.1, insofar as there's now a Start icon fixed to the lower-left corner of the screen. (You can't disable it.) Click on it, though, and you'll still get the modern Start Screen, not the old-school fly-out menus. If you ask us, then, it's a little hyperbolic to call this a step backward, though it sure does make the OS feel a little more familiar.
If you really want to relive the old days of Windows, though, you'll need to make a few additional settings tweaks yet. For starters, you'll want to enable boot-to-desktop, by right-clicking on the Taskbar, and then clicking "Properties." Stay in that same menu, and you can opt to have the same wallpaper for both the desktop and Start Screen. And really, you should try this out, not that it's our place to tell you what to do. It's the sort of feature that should have been an option in Windows 8 to begin with. But as simple as it is, it's an important change too. Having a consistent wallpaper lends the OS a more cohesive feel, and makes the jump between the desktop and Start Screen feel much less disorienting. And that's a very good thing indeed.   More

Monday, April 22, 2013

Google Might Change Google.com and Make Using the Internet Way Better


Gizmodo - As a fashionable internet denizen, you do not use a homepage, probably. You open a new browser window or tab, and you're met with your Chrome apps, or Safari favorites, or whatever the hell Firefox is doing now. And if you do have one, it's probably a legacy media hub like MSN, AOL or Yahoo, or a search page like Google or Bing. But what if the web found a way for a landing page to be useful again? 

According to GoogleSystem, Google has live code that suggests it's working on bringing its Google Now feature to the web. Not just the web, but the Google search page—basically the most frequented and iconic web page on the planet. And that would be awesome.  

Google Now is maybe the most powerful convergence Google has ever conjured up. It's the proto-synthesis of the decision-making future Mountain View promised us in exchange for gobbling up reams of personal, often sensitive data about our lives.  




Saturday, March 16, 2013

10 Must-Have Apps for Dog Owners




1.  Tagg

Tagg is essentially a GPS attachment for your dog's collar, and because of its many features, it can give you peace of mind. The app will track your dog's activity and send you a message if he goes beyond the boundaries you set. Not only that, Tagg allows you to make sure your dog is getting enough exercise by measuring movement.
Available on iOS and Android.

Screenshot courtesy of Tagg



2. Doggy Datez

Doggy Datez is a mobile social platform for dog owners and their dogs to make friends. The main idea is that you can "mark your territory" and see who else visits your spot. You're also able to search for other Doggy Datez users by gender, age, dog gender, dog age and/or dog breed.
Available on iOS and Android.

Screenshot courtesy of Doggy Datez
 

Friday, March 8, 2013

March Madness Apps For Your Mobile Device

CNETTV - For college basketball fans, we're about to embark on their favorite time of year: March Madness. This year, follow the NCAA tournament on your mobile device with a few handy apps. CNET's Kara Tsuboi reports on some of her favorites for keeping up with this annual tradition.

Saturday, February 2, 2013

iHeartRadio for Android Review


The best free streaming-radio app available

CNET - 

CNET Editors' Rating

4.5 stars - Outstanding


The good: With iHeartRadio, you can access more than 1,500 live stations from around the U.S., as well as the service's library of more than 15 million songs. The best part, though, is that custom stations are ad-free.

The bad: No pause, rewind, or record controls.

The bottom line: The best free streaming-radio app on the market, iHeartRadio takes some of (but not all) the best features from TuneIn Radio Pro and combines them with Pandora-like functionality.

Monday, December 10, 2012

13 killer Chrome apps to replace your desktop software


PCWorld - When Tim Berners-Lee invented the first Web browser in 1990, it was just an application made to read HTML pages passively. Fast-forward to today, and the modern Web browser has become a powerful platform in itself—almost a miniature operating system, capable of running complex JavaScript code and interacting with Flash plug-ins.

Indeed, Web pages have evolved into Web apps, to the point where we can do much of our productivity work in a browser window without ever having to invest in traditional desktop software.
But how much work can you really do from a browser? Could you replace all of your desktop apps with Chrome extensions, and be none the worse for wear? After testing a bunch of Chrome apps, I found mixed results: Web apps simply aren’t designed to be complete replicas of their desktop counterparts. Although these apps have gotten a lot better in the past couple of years, you might encounter a few peccadilloes, and desktop software may still be the better choice for your unique needs.

That said, if you haven't been keeping a close watch on the growing power of Chrome extensions and Web apps, you might be pleasantly surprised by our top alternatives to popular desktop software.

Word processing: Google Drive Documents

No matter what you do for a living, you've probably spent some time using a word processor in the past week, probably even in the past 24 hours. Unless you're doing some very complicated work, you could ditch your word processor for Google Drive right now without missing a beat. Sure, the interface is different: You'll find no Ribbon of commands and functions at the top of the screen, and you'll see far fewer buttons. But Google Drive's Documents let you do all of the important things, such as format text, create titles and lists, embed images into your documents, and more.

With its powerful collaboration features, Google Docs is ideal for
working on documents with friends and colleagues.
If you often find yourself emailing Word files back and forth, Google Drive might be even better than its desktop counterparts: You can just invite another person to view your document, and you can both edit the document at the same time, watching each other’s cursors at work. Add Skype to the mix, and it's just like working in the same room, even if the other person is a continent away.

More


Monday, July 16, 2012

6 Apps You Don’t Want To Miss

Brewster 
Brewster is a new app that helps streamline your contacts over a number of different services. Incorporating contacts from Facebook, Twitter, and email platforms, Brewster creates a profile for each person you know displaying all contact information in the same place.

The app offers quick access to the people you talk to most, and allows you to search through your contacts by name as well as city or interests –- such as sports teams.



Amazing Alex 
Rovio, the creator of the popular Angry Birds series, launched its newest game this week: Amazing Alex. Available for iOS and Android, the physics-based game has you do things such as launch baseballs at complex contraptions, causing chain reactions.

The game is essentially a rebranded version of Casey’s Contraptions, which was released last year for iPad and was well-reviewed then.



More

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Twitter iPhone app slated for major upgrade

The next version of Twitter's iOS app will sport a host of enhancements, according to leaked release notes.


CNET - A new, improved edition of Twitter's iOS app may be around the corner for users less than thrilled with the current version.

Release notes and screenshots posted by 9to5Mac about the iOS 6 App Store seem to reveal a slew of changes destined for Twitter for iPhone version 4.3.

Among the features touted in the description are push notifications for tweets that you follow, an alert when new stories are available, better support for password entries, avatars that take you directly to someone's profile, and improvements to autocomplete.    More

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Spider-Man swings into two new iOS apps





Get him, Spidey!
Get him, Spidey!
(Credit: Screenshot by Rick Broida/CNET)
 
CNET - App developers know how to plan ahead. Just in time for "The Amazing Spider-Man," which swings into theaters July 3, Disney Publishing and Gameloft have released two very different, but equally great, movie tie-ins.

The Amazing Spider-Man ($6.99) delivers an action-packed gaming experience, while the Spider-Man AR Book HD ($4.99) -- unappealing name notwithstanding -- gives kids an interactive storybook to read, hear, and play with.

Let's start with the game, which plays exactly like a Spider-Man adventure should, giving you an open city around which to crawl, swing, and battle.

Because games like this all but demand a big(ger) screen, I tested The Amazing Spider-Man mostly on my iPad 3. Visually, it's a knockout, bringing Manhattan to life like few mobile games I've seen. Cars drive, pedestrians walk, signs flash -- it's a feast for the eyes. (Gotta say, though, Spidey's rear end is a little too, er, defined for my liking. He's definitely sculpted to please the lay-daze.)    More

Monday, June 18, 2012

How Much Battery Life Do Your Apps Zap? This Tool Will Check


Mashable - A group of UC Berkeley scientists has turned their research about battery life into a handy app that can extend yours.

Carat, which is available for iOS and Android, measures your phone’s energy use and suggests actions that will make it more efficient.         More

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

The Best Android Browsers





PCMag.Com - Android’s stock browser gets the job done, but there are many alternatives that get the job done even more effectively. Check out some of our favorites.

Android’s stock browser sets the bar high for mobile browsers, standardizing features like voice search, User Agents (optimizing the interface for the screen size), multi-device syncing, JavaScript support, Adobe Flash if you’re running Android 2.2, and numerous sharing options.

The stock browser gets the job done, but Android users have so many more options that are even faster, lighter, stronger, smarter—whatever superlative you seek, really—than the stock browser. Whether you want to customize a gesture-based command, block mobile ads with a plug-in, or shrink your bandwidth consumption by 90 percent, there’s an alternative mobile browser for you.

Cult-favorite Dolphin, our Editors’ Choice, continues to lap the others when it comes to innovation and releasing rapid-fire updates to its Mini and HD browsers. Mozilla just released its tenth iteration of Firefox for Android, making it faster than ever. Oslo-based Opera revved up Mobile to version 12 and Mini to version 7. Meanwhile in the past year Google finally released mobile Chrome in beta, and we saw a relative newcomer emerge from China, UC Browser for Android. This list is by no means exhaustive, of course.

Regular or Mini?

For this roundup, we’ve explored seven alternatives to Android’s stock browser. The easiest way to sort these browsers is by cleaving them into two categories: traditional, full-featured mobile browser (Dolphin Browser HD, Firefox Mobile, Chrome in beta) or smaller, data-conscious mini browsers. Full-fledged mobile browsers tend to deliver a more desktop-complete mobile experience with advanced feature sets and support for embedded video, whereas their minis prize performance and backward compatibility.

Browsers Benchmarked

We benchmarked these browsers wherever possible, and in the case of the mini browsers—not suited to JavaScript tests—we performed real-world testing. Take a look at the reviews, performance charts, and slideshows. This list is by no means complete, lacking cult favorites like SkyFire and Maxthon for Android, but the following are tried and true alternatives we’d recommend:


Dolphin Browser HD 7.3

Free
Dolphin retains the Editors’ Choice designation among mobile browsers, for amalgamating the most complete set of thoughtful features—custom Gestures, Auto-fill searches, and Siri-like voice control, to name a few—without affecting performance and speed. It’s the highest-achiever of the mobile browsers when it comes to performance, but not the fastest, according to our JavaScript benchmarks. Read the full review ››


Dolphin Mini 2.2

Free
Dolphin Mini is the slimmer, faster version of Dolphin HD, purportedly taking up far less bandwidth. Plus it only requires Android 1.6 and up as opposed to Android 2.0.1 and up for its full-fledged sibling. It’s a speed demon too, although Opera Mini (see below) loads non-JavaScript pages faster. Dolphin Mini also skimps a bit on performance, especially for Flash content. Read the full review ››

More

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

PS3 gets Amazon Instant streaming video app




CNET - The Sony PS3 has added an Amazon Instant app to its suite of streaming video services, letting you streaming purchased and rented content, as well as letting Amazon Prime subscribers streaming free Prime TV shows and movies.

Amazon Instant joins Netflix, Hulu Plus, CinemaNow, Vudu, NHL, MLB.TV, NFL Sunday Ticket, SEC college sports, XOS college sports, and Sony Video Unlimited in the PS3′s suite of streaming video services.                 More

Monday, March 26, 2012

Amid Privacy Concerns, Apple Has Started Rejecting Apps That Access UDIDs




TechCrunch - Amid extra scrutiny from Congress around privacy issues, Apple this week has started rejecting apps that access UDIDs, or identification numbers that are unique to every iPhone and iPad.

Apple had already given developers a heads-up about the change more than six months ago when it said in some iOS documentation that it was going to deprecate UDIDs. But it looks like Apple is moving ahead of schedule with pressure from lawmakers and the media. It can take more than a year to deprecate features because developers need time to adjust and change their apps. A few weeks ago, some of the bigger mobile-social developers told me that Apple had reached out and warned them to move away from UDIDs.

But this is the first time Apple has issued outright rejections for using UDIDs.

“Everyone’s scrambling to get something into place,” said Victor Rubba, chief executive of Fluik, a Canadian developer that makes games like Office Jerk and Plumber Crack. “We’re trying to be proactive and we’ve already moved to an alternative scheme.” Rubba said he isn’t sending any updates until he sees how the situation shakes out in the next few days.

For those unaware, the UDID is an alphanumeric string that is unique to each Apple device. It’s currently used by mobile ad networks, game networks, analytics providers, developers and app testing systems, like TestFlight, for example.

Playhaven, which helps developers monetize more than 1,200 games across iOS and Android, said several of its customers had been rejected in the last week. The company’s chief executive Andy Yang says that developers should try and stay as flexible as possible by supporting multiple ID systems until there’s a clear replacement.              More