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

Thursday, 29 December 2016

Why people prefer iOS over Android, and vice versa

Just about a decade ago, having a cell phone was not a necessity, and 5 years before that, it was a luxury. As for the present, the peeps over at Daily Mail released an article stating that a screen lock app that was used, showed that the average cell phone user checks their phone 110 times a day. Cell phones have become a requirement for people, a part of their own self. And with the huge boom in the smartphone market, people can check literally anything from their phone. The two major phone operating systems, Android and iOS, have always had people divided over what smartphone they purchase, each with their own benefits and disadvantages.


iOS, ran on Apple’s iPhone has always been a people’s favorite. With beautiful, seamless user design and experience, it truly engages the user from the lock screen to its many features. The simplicity iOS provides is unbeatable. Also, Apple’s quality app and prosperous music stores have always played a huge role in their success. Apple has always scanned and kept a close check on user made apps, ensuring continuous security for all of its app buyers. If at anytime a user has an issue with their iPhone, Apple is always willing at their store or one of their certified vendors. With consistent and frequent software updates, Apple always makes sure that their users update to quickly fix bugs and update/install new features. The seamless integration provided when connected with the user’s Mac PC/laptop is also a huge plus. iOS also features iMessage, and Facetime, exclusively available to iOS users, and extremely fast and simple.
Along with its marvelous pros, iOS comes with some cons as well. One of the most common complaint being the locked down, unchangeable interface. There are a severely limited amount of customizations available, none of them actually changing the interface. No third party apps are available, and users may only install apps from the Apple app store. Developers must pay a service fee every year, to access the iOS SDK, which is also only available on the Mac platform. iOS only runs Apple’s iPhones, which are somewhat expensive. Also, Apple Maps have always been a step behind Google’s, and most users prefer the latter.


Google’s Android has been widely used since its release in 2007. As of 2014, Android’s market share has been 81.5% of smartphones, globally. The operating system has been used on several devices, manufactured by companies including Samsung, HTC, LG, Motorola, Sony, and several others. With the wide variety of manufacturers and types of phones, the price is diversified, allowing customers to be able to choose their type. Unlike iOS, Android is extremely open ended, and all developers need to start making apps is the SDK, available free from their website. The customizability also allows users to choose what they want, increasing the user experience and satisfaction.
Similar to iOS, Android does have its disadvantages. The foremost being the severe lack in design compared to Apple’s. Additionally, being such an open ended operating system, users who are less familiar with the mobile scene may have some trouble navigating and accessing features that should otherwise be relevantly simple to get to. With no base messaging system such as iMessage, the normal text messaging may seem too “slow” and “out-of-date” for those who have used it. With several kinds of phones available, software updates purely depend on what carrier the user’s phone is from, and what kind of phone it is. There is also no automatic sync available with a user’s pc.




The cell phone market continues to grow at a rapid pace, with new competitors rising, bringing different kinds of phones to the market. As of now, Android and iOS stay the most used, and may continue to do so for a while. An imperative thing to keep in mind, is the demographics of where people live in relation to what operating system they use. Compared to the U.S, Apple is scarce compared to the market Android has brought worldwide. So what do you prefer, iOS, or Android?

16 Android Apps Actually Worth Paying For

Android's poly-manufacturer ecosystem has long since eclipsed iOS as the world's most popular mobile operating system. However, app developers still tend to fare better in the Applesphere—financially speaking. Even though Google Play regularly outshines the App Store in total number of downloads, Apple users are far more willing than their Android counterparts to actually plunk down cash for their apps.
This is not surprising, given what we know about users of each ecosystem. Speaking very broadly, Apple is a premium brand that appeals to users who will spend extra for what they believe (rightly or wrongly) to be a superior experience, while Android is the mass appeal brand for those who are fine with the basics.
To put it another way: iOS is Nirvana to Android's Candlebox; Quentin Tarantino to Guy Ritchie; or perhaps even 1980s Apple to 1980s Windows.
My fellow Android users, it's unfortunate that you're not buying apps. Your hesitance is one reason iOS users get the cool apps first. The Android app developer community is now growing by leaps and bounds, but that is based on the sheer number of Android users out there. Just imagine how dynamic our shared ecosystem would be if there was a correlating financial incentive!
It's not like apps are that expensive—very rarely do they go north of the $5 mark. And consider that these apps are, in many cases, so much more useful than the software of the PC era that would regularly cost $40 and $50.
Really, when you think about it, apps—truly worthwhile apps—are some of the best bargains available.
The alternative is barf-inducing mobile ads or sly freemium models that prey on the ignorant. Everybody wins when you are willing to shell out a little for the apps you use every day. Here we present 16 apps available for download in Google Play that are completely worth the tiny cost of entry.
PinOut
The phrase "mobile pinball game" might not automatically inspire excitement, but the luminescent infinite-pinball game PinOut might just change your mind.
How is a pinball game "infinite"? You can control the left and right flippers throughout the ever-expanding board, which you use to propel your ball further along before time runs out. Hidden among the various obstacles are hidden mini-games consisting of blocky 8-bit interfaces (how very old-school pinball!) that allow you to collect extra time.
It's free to download, but I recommend unlocking the game via a $3 in-game purchase. This will allow you to save your progress at various checkpoints. My only beef with this game is that I wish there were more levels. I want more!
Monument Valley
There are lots of free games available in Google Play. You can spend hours on end engrossed in a well-designed mobile game. So, why wouldn't you throw a few bucks at a talented developer? Otherwise, you'll be bombarded by ads or bombarded with requests to "upgrade."
One of those games we think is worthy of a buck is Monument Valley. The heralded puzzle game will keep you entertained for hours, days, and weeks in a beautiful and imaginative dream world.
Pocket Casts
Do you commute, do household chores, or travel? Even if you do none of these things, you should still make the time to stuff some podcasts in your earholes. Podcasting is a wonderful medium that is finally maturing and having a cultural moment. Unfortunately, most podcasting software is lacking—either in functionality or design. Pocket Casts is one of the few pod apps that feels fully realized.
The app features a stylish, flat design and is extremely intuitive to use, making it easy to discover, organize, and sync your podcasts across various devices. Pocket Casts will automatically download the latest episode of your favorites as soon as they are available, or you can download various episodes a la carte. If you spend any time with podcasts, do yourself a favor and download this friendly and well-designed app.
Runtastic Pro
When you run, your companion for all those hours is likely your gadget of choice. So, why not invest in the best companion. Runtastic Proquantifies and enhances your workout by tracking your preferred statistics, using GPS to map your route, and even an audio coach to push you based on your personal preferences. If $1.49 of commitment is too much for you, there is a free version with ads and limited functionality.
Swype
For all the benefits the touch screen allows, it has not been able to improve upon the old reliable physical keyboard—but that doesn't mean we shouldn't strive for greatness (you know, if we want to remain periphery free). Our Editors' Choice for virtual keyboards is Swype. It's highly customizable and offers benefits like voice dictation and handwriting recognition.
And the best part is that it learns as you write, so it gets better over time. If 99 pennies is too much for you, a good free alternative is SwiftKey, but you will have to pay for extra themes and features.
Tasker
Your smartphone is a powerful device that fits in your pocket. Unfortunately, you are limited by what Google and your phone's manufacturer will allow you to do—unless you are willing to invest the time in rooting and coding your device. That's where an app like Tasker comes in.
Tasker allows you to extend your phone's customization—no coding required. It gives you the ability to specify what types of alerts (e.g. vibrations, Notify LED, pop-ups, sounds) any individual digital action will cause. It makes it a lot easier to sort through your computer's files (including zip/unzip capabilities), and a whole lot more. If you want to get more smart out of your phone, this is the app for you.
Star Walk
This augmented reality app will use your device to present an overlay on the sky with information on all the bodies that you see—all updated as you move your device in real time. You don't even have to be outside, it can give you a view of the sky based on your location. Wouldn't you pay 99 cents for the solar system?
TuneIn Radio Pro
TuneIn boasts a collection of over 100,000 AM and FM radio stations streaming from around the globe, right to your phone or tablet for free. You can even record audio directly to your device and play it back later. It's like a global radio DVR. How have you not bought this yet?
Spotify Premium
There are a several streaming video services out there, which are quite good and I would personally recommend—but only to send to the Big Screen in your living room. It's a waste to watch movies and shows on a tiny screen, IMHO. However, when it comes to streaming some tunes, any capable connected device (paired with a good pair of headphones) will bring the magic!
Spotify is a cool cloud-based music streaming service that replaces the need to keep local or physical copies of the music you love. There is an available free tier, but you'll have to contend with the occasional audio (or video) ad and only have the ability to shuffle through albums or playlists (on a phone, at least—the tablet app has the same a la carte functionality as the Web app).
If you consider yourself a true music fan, it may be worth it to you to upgrade to Spotify Premium for $9.99 month. The Premium tier nixes the ads, gives you a la carte music-on-demand, allows you to download songs for offline listening, and gives you unlimited skips when shuffling around. In effect, you are paying to enhance your life with (just about) all the world's music. If you value the role that music plays in your life, then definitely consider an upgrade.
Bitdefender
You can download the app for free to test drive it for four days, but then you will have to pay the $15 fee for a year's worth of coverage (or $1.49 / month) to continue. And as buggy and frightening as the Android ecosystem can be, you would be wise to spend a little extra for our Editors' Choice for Android mobile security.
Norton Family Parental Control
The world is a scary place for kids (and that includes the virtual world as well). Thankfully there are tools like Norton Family Premier (the app is called Norton Family Parental Control), which can make it a little less scary.
For $49.99 / year, the service gives parents to power to monitor (and even block/prohibit) their kids' online activities—everything from websites to texting/calling to social media and other in-app activities (including the ability to block access to certain apps altogether).
That fee includes unlimited device support, so it can cover a whole family. The service even has an IRL feature called "location supervision," which allows parents to track their child's physical location (or at least their child's device) from anywhere.
NordVPN
An antivirus program isn't the only thing you need to protect yourself online. You should also consider a mobile VPN to
stop
make it harder for nefarious actors to eavesdrop on your communications or track your behavior.
And yes, you are being watched. That's not delusional—while the NSA most likely doesn't care what nonsense you are up to, online marketers and unseen bots are watching your behavior in order to micro-target ads and other corporate messaging. A VPN helps make you invisible online by masking your device's IP address.
There are some faster VPNs out there, but for people who want basic functionality with an easy-to-use interface, NordVPN is a good choice. For $8/month, you can mask up to six simultaneous devices (it works across multiple platforms) when accessing the Web.
LastPass
You know you're asking for trouble if you're not keeping unique and unguessable passwords for each of your online accounts, right? I mean you are aware of this very basic tenet of online protection, correct? Good! Because you don't want to be one of those idiots who gets all their online accounts accessed when one is inevitably compromised.
But keeping all those long passwords in order can get unwieldy real fast—especially when inputting them on a mobile device. That's why a service like LastPass comes in handy—it can securely save and create hard-to-guess passwords for all your accounts. Previously, you had to have a Premium account to have your passwords saved across all your mobile devices, but as of November, LastPass will let people use the service on all their Internet-enabled mobile and desktop devices for free.
Pudding Monsters Premium
You definitely don't want your kids subjected to some mobile ad algorithm. So for a fun simple puzzle game like Puzzle Monsters, why not get rid of those annoying ads (in fact, video ads) for just a buck? Advertisers will have enough opportunities to get at them in other ways.
Weather Timeline – Forecast
There are lots of weather apps out there. In fact, there are lots of free weather apps out there. So, why on Earth would you pay for one? It comes down to stepping up your digital environment.
Your weather app will undoubtedly be one of the pieces of mobile software you access the most, so it's well worth it to shell out a little bit extra for a smooth, sexy (ad-free) design. And what the matter-of-factly dubbed "Weather Timeline-Forecast" lacks in branding, it makes up for in minimalist, easy-to-navigate aesthetics. In addition to the design, I've also found that this app is far more accurate than any of the cheap-o weather apps I've used in the past.
Small World 2
This used to be $6.99, but even at that price, it was a bargain when you consider that the popular board game it's based on costs $50. Currently $1.99, this game allows you to wage multi-civilization, multi-generational fantasy warfare against friends in table-top battle or online (or you could just play solo against the game itself). Here's a chance to vent all that pent-up Game of Thrones energy!

The must-have apps for your new Android smartphone


There are over two million apps in the Google Play store, and stepping off the safety net of Google’s front-page suggestions can be daunting. Luckily, we’ve got your back.
We earned our appy deep sea diving certificate years ago, and have sorted all the good stuff from the copycats and the impostors.
We’re going to give you the grand roll call of all the apps we consider essential to at least consider for your Android, category by category. It’s time to get rid of all the bloat on your phone and replace it with these gems.
Music
Phones are perfect mini media players, but few come with the apps you need to get the most out of this side of mobile life. If you just want to play your own files, download Phonograph.
It’s an ultra-clean MP3 player app that looks like has been made from the same building blocks as the basic Android interface.
If you’d rather stream music rather than keeping it on your phone’s own storage, you have plenty of options. The most popular is Spotify.
It costs $9.99/£9.99 a month for unlimited access or you can try out the free version, which has ads and only lets you ‘shuffle’ through an artist’s songs rather than picking exact tracks 24/7.
Alternatives worth considering include Deezer and Tidal, which lets you pay more for lossless streaming. Google also offers its own app, Google Play Music, too. This is a music store as well as a Spotify-like streaming service.
If you’re more of a radio fan, download TuneIn Radio. It gives you easy access to thousands of radio stations across the globe, including TechRadar favorites like BBC 6 Music.
How about the modern equivalent of classic radio? Podcasts are well worth checking out if you haven’t yet.
Podcast Addict is a great freebie podcast player and finder that lets you easily subscribe to your favorite podcast series and either stream or download new episodes. You can also pay a small fee to get rid of the app’s ads.
Video
Watching video on your phone is a great way to get through a boring train journey, and video apps fall into two camps like music ones. There are video playback apps and streaming ones.
If you just want an app that will play all your downloads, check out MX Player. It’s simple, it’s clean and it can handle almost any kind of file. MX Player is free too, although you can pay a little to get rid of ads.
There’s a lot more going on over on the streaming side, though.
Starting with the basics, you can’t miss YouTube. This is an official Google app so it will probably be pre-installed on your Android phone. Just like YouTube on your computer, you can watch days’ worth of cat videos, episodes of PewDiePie and millions of other videos in-between.
There’s also a premium YouTube Red service that offers TV-quality shows too. It’s available in the US but not the UK at the time of writing.
Digging further into the paid video apps NetflixAmazon Instant VideoSky Now TV (UK only) and MUBI all let you watch movies, TV episodes or both on your phone. Hulu is another great pick, but UK readers are out of luck as it hasn’t launched there yet.
Anyone living in the UK should check out TV catch-up king BBC iPlayertoo, and there are also catch-up apps for some of the other main TV channels. My5 features Channel 5 content, All 4 Channel 4’s broadcasts and ITV Hub lets you catch up with programs broadcast on ITV array of channels.
Social
What phone is complete without some social media goodies? The most popular apps should come as no surprise to any of you: Facebook and Twitter. These are essential downloads unless you’ve sworn off these services.
If you chat to friends over Facebook you’ll also need Facebook Messenger as it has its own app.
There are also third-party apps that let you customize how your Twitter feed is delivered. Talon is like the Twitter app in most respects, but has themes that give it a different look.
Loads of other social apps exist, but you’ll probably only want to get involved if your friends use them too.
The one obvious exception is Snapchat. It’s a completely social-driven app, but also has face-morphing filters that change week-to-week. They are fun enough to be worth playing around with on their own, even if you don’t want to use Snapchat properly.
Other social apps you might like include Instagram, the picture-driven network, and Pinterest, which lets you create virtual mood boards. Pinterest is particularly useful if you’re thinking of redecorating or want to come up with new wardrobe ideas.
Messaging
We can’t talk about messaging without mentioning the app that has single-handedly killed SMS for many people, WhatsApp. In case you’ve been avoiding this one with all your might, it lets you chat, send images and videos and even make calls all within WhatsApp’s walls.
It uses encryption too, so your chats are safe. The other ultra-mainstream chat app is one we’ve already mentioned, Facebook Messenger.
Another great way to chat without having to setup a brand new account is with Google Allo. This lets you chat to your contacts using your Google email as your ID/login.
If you’re worried about privacy, you should also check out Signal. This is like WhatsApp, but built from the ground up to keep your private chats private. It can also suck-up your SMS messages to become your one-stop messaging spot.
Signal is relatively plain, though. If you still send a lot of texts and find your bog standard SMS app boring, download ChompSMS. It’s a much more colorful and customizable SMS client than inbuilt ones.
Email
The first place people should heard for email is Gmail, which comes pre-installed on all Android phones. It’s just as happy with your old Yahoo and Hotmail addresses as Google ones: it doesn’t discriminate. However, there are other options if you don’t like the app.
Microsoft Outlook wins second place, with a clean interface based on the Material look at the root of Android.
Boxer is an alternative from a less well-known name with some slightly different approaches to a few things. For example, you can ‘like’ emails to let people know you received them without a full reply, and sync emails to an Evernote account.
Keyboard
If you’re having trouble with your phone’s keyboard, it may be because it uses a dodgy third-party keyboard app. To ‘reset’ to the Android standard, give Google keyboard a download. It’s all the keyboard most people need. It looks good, offers swipe-based typing and is accurate.
It actually leaves little room for top third-party alternatives like SwiftKey to thrive. If you’re after something a little different, though, you do need to give SwiftKey a spin. This app lets you thoroughly customize the look of the keyboard, and tweak its layout and spacing much more than the Google keyboard.
Microsoft has also released a next-gen keyboard for Android, called Microsoft Hub. It has cool extra features like translation right from the keyboard, an integrated synonym finder and quick web searches. As we write this it’s in beta, but shows plenty of promise.
Productivity
Now, let’s get down to work. It’s testament to how good Google’s own app roster is that you don’t have to install anything to get work docs on your phone. Google Drive already has phone-friendly ways to read and edit docs, check out spreadsheets and cloud-store all your files. If you haven’t checked it out yet, give it a look.
One of the apps we always end up needing when making a fresh start with a new phone is a PDF reader, though. There are loads of simple PDF reader apps on Google Play, including Google PDF, but you can get a PDF reader plus a brand new office suite with Polaris Office.
This is a bit more traditional than Google Drive, feeling like a true mobile phone take on Microsoft Office. It’s free to use, although you only get 60MB’s worth of use a month. We’ve always been happy with that as editing docs barely uses any data, but full subs start at $3.99 a month and you can also pay $1.99 to get rid of the in-app ads if they get on your nerves.
If you don’t get on with Polaris Office, also check out the Microsoft Office apps, which have made it to Android: WordExcel and PowerPoint. You only get a basic experience without an Office 365 sub, though, so you’ll have to take it for a test drive to see if it meets your needs.
What we tend to need much more than a full office suite on our phone is a basic note-taker and to-do list, though. Microsoft again caters for this with OneNote, but there’s fierce competition here too.
Evernote is still our go-to note-taker, although like Polaris Office there’s a 60MB limit before you butt up against the limits of the free version. Google Keep is a good all-free alternative. With these note-takers it’s all about which system you choose to embrace, as part of the appeal is that you can pretty much recover your notes from any platform: phone, tablet, laptop.
Entertainment & News
Next up let’s look at the best ways to get your digital fix of updates and entertainment. For something simple, the BBC News is a great source for quality content, and not just stories relating to UK issues.
Flipboard is the more stylish and customizable option. It lets you feed-in your interests by picking from hundreds of topics, and then creates a digital magazine of new stories from across the web. It’s much more stylish and rich-looking than your average news feed.
The part some of you might not like is that Flipboard constructs these mobile phone magazines out of its own sources. A lot of these are fantastic, but you don’t get fine-tuned control over what gets in there, just a chance to pick your subjects of interest.
That’s why we still have a lot of time for a more traditional news app like Feedly. With Feedly you pick your sources, not just your subjects, and you can add ones not in the app’s databanks by manually feeding-in RSS feeds.
But maybe you’ve had enough of reading.
Imgur lets you chow down on viral-worthy photos and GIFs not spoon-fed to you by your Facebook friends. It’s a perfect way to waste five minutes while on the way to work.
If you’d rather doodle rather than just consuming content, check out Autodesk Sketchbook. It’s a fairly serious art app that doesn’t expect you to be a pro. We prefer using this on tablets to phones, and it’s even better if you have a device with a pressure sensitive stylus like the Samsung Galaxy Note 5.
Travel & Holidays
Google Maps is a great way to find your way from A to B, particularly now that it lets you cache map data for use when you don’t have mobile internet. But if you use public transport, CityMapper is a must-have.
It serves 38 cities across the world, using live public transport information to let you know when the next bus is coming and how train delay X is going to affect your journey. We use Citymapper for trains, tubes and buses for the most part, but it’ll also show you routes for cycling, driving and walking.
If you’re going on holiday, you also have to get hold of TripAdvisor. It lists hundreds of attractions, restaurants and hotels per city, all with reviews and candid images.
You can also download entire cities’ worth of information, including maps, which is particularly handy if roaming charges threaten to eat away all your spending money.
Security
Getting serious for a moment, you need to start being more careful about your internet privacy. Security is becoming more of an issue by the year, and monitoring the activity of normal people is rapidly being considered an everyday part of national security in many countries.
For most, the important measures to take are to ensure you passwords aren’t terrible and that you’re not at risk of hijack when you use the free Wi-Fi networks littered around all high streets.
Dashlane is our top pick for passwords, acting as a repository for your logins so you can use truly complex passwords without having a flawless memory. It works on your laptop/desktop as well as your phone, ready to become the backbone of your security.
Protecting yourself against nasty Wi-Fi networks, and other forms of intrusion, is a bit more involved. You want a VPN for that.
This creates a secure encrypted connection between your Android and a server on the VPN provider’s side. There are free VPNs, but a paid one like NordVPN is worth investing in. It’s faster, and you can have more confidence your browsing data is not being shared with other parties.
With good passwords and a VPN, you can be sure you are pretty secure if you only download apps from Google Play and don’t download anything else suspect online. However, if you’re a bit more adventurous you’ll also want an antivirus package for your phone, like Norton Security and Antivirus.
This gets you free virus scanning and some anti-theft measures. The Premium version adds active scanning of apps and web content to block any nasties before they get close to your phone. You’ll pay £29.99/$29.99 a year for this.
We also want to give a shout-out to an app we mentioned earlier, Signal. This is like WhatsApp, a messenger app, but has a greater on security and privacy. The key difference is that Signal doesn’t store any metadata so works that bit harder to keep your chats private.
Launchers (and Widgets)
Let’s finish with something a bit lighter, a way to change how your phone looks and feels. Most phones use custom interfaces that paste a manufacturer-made layer of gloss over Android. Some are great, others not so hot.
The Google Pixel launcher lets you peel off this digital wallpaper to get a top-layer look and feel that much more like default Android. It’s a complete phone overhaul that needs no tech know-how, and you may well prefer it the default look.
There are loads of third-party launchers that pull off the same trick but with their own take on Android. You’ll find plenty just by searching for ‘launcher’ on Google Play. Our pick of the moment, though, is Evie. It’s an ultra-simple, ultra-quick interface that lets you get to your app drawer simply by flicking right from your home screen. Give it a whirl.
The lighter side of UI customization comes from widgets, those home screen gadgets no-one really talks about anymore. While nowhere near as popular as they were five years ago, an app like HD Widgets is still handy for finding a nice new home screen clock.