Dont Wait for Future Be The Future
Showing posts with label Android Apps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Android Apps. Show all posts

Tuesday, 12 July 2016

Pokemon Go for every Location






Travel between the real world and the virtual world of Pokémon with Pokémon GO for iPhone and Android devices. With Pokémon GO, you’ll discover Pokémon in a whole new world—your own! Pokémon GO is built on Niantic’s Real World Gaming Platform and will use real locations to encourage players to search far and wide in the real world to discover Pokémon. Pokémon GO allows you to find and catch more than a hundred species of Pokémon as you explore your surroundings.
The Pokémon video game series has used real-world locations such as the Hokkaido and Kanto regions of Japan, New York, and Paris as inspiration for the fantasy settings in which its games take place. In Pokémon GO, the real world will be the setting!
Get on your feet and step outside to find and catch wild Pokémon. Explore cities and towns around where you live and even around the globe to capture as many Pokémon as you can. As you move around, your smartphone will vibrate to let you know you're near a Pokémon. Once you've encountered a Pokémon, take aim on your smartphone's touch screen and throw a Poké Ball to catch it. Be careful when you try to catch it, or it might run away! Also look for PokéStops located at interesting places, such as public art installations, historical markers, and monuments, where you can collect more Poké Balls and other items.
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Friday, 19 June 2015

Narendra Modi App



We’re referring to the app developer’s buzzword. Responsive is one that adapts itself across devices and screen sizes. It’s the latest buzzword in the technology space. Indeed, Narendra Modi is present on screens across all form factors. However, the term responsive is associated with the way your site adapts itself to varying screen sizes. Yesterday, India’s PM Narendra Modi announced the ‘Narendra Modi App’ on Twitter:

Western governments have had a distinct set of rules for digital communications and ensure every website, microsite, webpage or digital app follows design philosophies laid down by the government.
India’s Prime Minister is now using mobile applications to engage with citizens, which is welcome. We downloaded the application and explored it. So here’s a review of the official Narendra Modi app.
You begin by downloading the app from the Google Play Store. Once you install the app, enter your phone number and date of birth. You can access the menu from the top right.

  

The date selector makes it easy to choose the date, month and year with a slider. Next, in the ‘News’ section, you can choose between ‘Recent’ or ‘Popular’ news items by setting the button on the top right.



You can get updates, watch the Mann Ki Baat programme by the PM. You can also write to the Prime Minister and give ideas and suggestions to “be an active partner in nation building.”


The app also gives you a glimpse of all that is communicated across social media channels such as Facebook and Twitter, the PM’s blog, and his speeches.


From the interviews given by the PM, to government data, you’ll get access to it all. It’s Narendra Modi everywhere!


In the 30 minutes since installing the application, we’ve received 3 notifications. One, a greeting for Ramadaan, the other greeting the people of Seychelles on their National Day and of course the announcement of the app being launched.
And yes, you get points for interacting with the application. On a lighter note, we wonder if these points would result in gratification for the end user.
We hope the data captured by the app is secure and isn’t hacked in the future. Thecollaborative approach taken by PM Narendra Modi in building mobile applications for the PMO is a good step indeed.We’ll wait and see how the app takes off on the Play Store, and compare it to some of the popular political apps out there!
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Tuesday, 5 May 2015

Blek apk





                                 










Description

"The game looks like modern art and plays extraordinarily well. [...] Blek is a perfect representation of touch-screen play." ~ The New York Times
Blek is a unique, award winning game about imagination and personality. Everything you draw keeps moving - and watching your creations move is like watching magic.
The goal is simple: shape a line that collects all colored circles avoiding black holes on its route. There are no specific moves that you need to master. To every level countless solutions exist, from delightfully simple to exceptionally deep and complex, yet always elegant.
• Truly unique & entertaining experience
• Incredibly appealing and clever gameplay
• Includes 60 amazing levels
• Meticulously designed for the touchscreen devices

----- Recognition & Commentaries -----
"One of the greatest joys of Blek is experimenting with your approach." ~ WIRED
" Blek is the soul of touch screen gaming, a perfect representation of what this sort of play is all about." ~ Kotaku
"It’s the sort of game you’d want to put on a space probe: when the aliens play it, they’ll take a liking to us right away." ~ Joshua Rothman, The New Yorker
"The genius of Blek's design is that it channels that weird sense of freedom you get from helping a doodle unfold - the freedom that comes of kicking yourself loose from life's formal structures" ~ Christian Donlan, Eurogamer
"Wonderful experience" ~ Pocket Gamer
"Blek is a thing of elegant, intuitive beauty" ~ Edge Online

----- Awards -----
• Best Mobile Game - Casual Connect Europe, Amsterdam
• Excellence in Innovation - International Mobile Gaming Awards
• Best Game - Content Award Vienna

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Friday, 20 March 2015

Zombie Highway 2 apk

Description:


    Cars, Guns, and Zombies. What more could you want?

    I'll tell you: NITRO!

    Zombie Highway is back!
 - Completely overhauled, intense gameplay featuring NITRO!
 - 6 redesigned cars
 - 15 -upgradable- weapons,100% redesigned. 4 completely new super-weapons!
 - 10 Zombie types, 4 all new!
 - 55 challenging objectives!
 - The Daily Challenge! A unique challenge every day!
 - A new, randomly generated road with multiple, super-detailed environments every game.
 - Your friends appear on your highway near their best score!

 The goal is to survive... but you wont. How far will you go?
 It's you, your heavily armed passenger, against a boatload of super-strong, leaping zombies.
  TILT
  Steer to avoid obstacles all while trying to SMASH latched on zombies into debris - OR - run them down  before they can
 jump on your car!

 TAP
 Shoot zombies with a growing arsenal of handguns, shotguns, and automatics. Shoot recently smashed  zombies for extra damage!

 REPEAT
 Improve your skills, unlock weapons, beat all your friends on facebook! It will be hard to put this one down.

 IAP Policy:
 - Everything in Zombie Highway 2 can be unlocked or used for free with a reasonable amount of effort
 - In app purchases do NOT give players a long term advantage over players who don't make purchases

ScreenShots:











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Thursday, 1 January 2015

Best Apps OF 2014

Workflow

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND
Workflow is the perfect example of keeping it simple (stupid). Apps like Drafts have given iOS users automation abilities for some time now, but Workflow simplifies that process and makes it much more accessible for your average, everyday iPhone user. For those whole like to embrace the promise that technology truly can make our lives easier, Workflow is a must. [iOS]

Snowball Beta

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND
On my smartphone I have SMS, Messenger, WhatsApp, Slack, and Hangouts. The amount of mpm (messages per minute) I receive is out of control, so I need an app to help tame the digital chaos. Enter: Snowball. The idea behind the app is simple—corral all major messaging services into one place so you can browse and dismiss more easily. Snowball also adopts Facebook's chat heads so any message will always be present on your screen, and if you find chat heads annoying, you can just disable it. Plus, the app has a Yeti for a mascot, which is adorable. [Android]

Photomath

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND
Math and I have a contentious relationship, meaning I pretty much suck at it. But if I had Photomath in high school, I might have stood a chance. Take a picture of math equation with your camera, and boom—the app churns out an answer with step-by-step analysis. It's more of a learning tool than a cheating tool, but I'm not going to tell you how to use it. [iOS andWindows Phone]

Hyperlapse

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND
From the creators of Instagram—you know, that one app that has more users than Twitter—comes Hyperlapse, the super-easy way to create time lapses on your iPhone. The beauty of the app is in its simplicity. Shoot a hyperlapse (or selfielapse), edit the speed, and that's it. What use to take professional photographers hours to complete just took you minutes. For free, it doesn't get much better than that. [iOS]

WeTransfer

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND
Sending large files on any device pretty much sucks. Email clients hit data caps, and you're left sending multiple emails, and compressing, compressing, compressing. There's a better way, and it's WeTransfer. The free app lets you send up to 10GB of data quick and easy. The app simply sends a download link to whatever or whomever you're trying to reach. It's a must-have if you're constantly slinging gigabytes among your various devices. [iOS and Android]

Microsoft Office

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND
Until 2014, editing Microsoft documents on mobile devices made me want to cry. Bundled into an all encompassing app, the tools and abilities were drastically restricted and borderline pointless. Earlier in the year, Microsoft released Office for iPad and quickly followed up withmobile versions in the fall for iPhone. The app is completely redesigned to take advantage of the device you're using, and Microsoft also opened up a lot of features for free to users with only pro tools hiding behind a subscription. Who said you can't be productive on the go? [iOS]

Inbox





This year, Google tried to solve one of the hardest mobile software questions: Email. What it came up with was an Inbox, a separate app from standard email that integrates Mailbox-like snooze features and a more glance-friendly interface. The app is still languishing in an early invite-required beta, but out of the gate, it's a pretty impressive attempt. [ iOS and Android]

Reporter

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND
The biggest headache with the quantified-self trend is remaining vigilant in logging data and keeping track of your activity. Reporter tries to simplify things by pinging you several times throughout the day and creating a short quiz for you to answer. Over time, Reporter begins churning out the stats behind your habits, and the best part is that it's real data you can use. Once you pay the $4 premium, Reporter will transform you into numbers. [ iOS]

Xim

The Best Apps of 2014
This year, Microsoft made sharing slideshows less of headache. With Xim, all you do is select photos, add contacts, and press send. Maybe the smartest part of this little app is only the person creating the slideshow needs to download it. Xim sends the slideshow as a link that opens up in a browser, so if your friends, family, or that fun drunk you met last night doesn't know a Xim from a zoo, no worries. The experience is also intimate since all participant actions are shared across devices in real time, like you're flipping through a photo album side-by-side. [iOSAndroid, and Windows Phone]

JibJab Messages

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND
This one is out of left field, but JibJab Messages lets you star in your own bite-sized, ever-looping piece of GIF greatness, and it's incredibly addicting. After coughing up just a $1 after the free trial, you get to make all the GIFs plastered with your (or your friend's) face you want—and it's super easy to do. Snap a pic, or grab one from your camera roll, and be on your way. Will it help you organize your life? No. Be more productive? Definitely not. Is it fun as hell? You betcha. [ iOS]

FireChat

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND
Strangely enough, FireChat isn't the most well-designed, eye-catching, or super useful app of 2014, but it was one of the few that actually made a real, tangible difference in the world. Hong Kong protesters used FireChat's mesh networks—the offline tech that makes chatting with anyone nearby possible—to send messages without cell reception. FireChat is the perfect app for protest organizers and crowds, but it's "Nearby" function only stretches about 30 feet or so. Regardless, it's a neat app worth having in your arsenal. [iOS and Android]

Office Lens

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND
Doing expense reports and just digitizing documents in general is the absolute worst, but Microsoft's Office Lens can snap your messy chicken scratch or printed docs and churn out a digital copy you can share or save to OneNote. BONUS: the photos are also OCR'ed, meaning the text is searchable. That's just all-around neat. [ Windows Phone]

Overcast

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND

Because of Serial, podcasts are cool again (jk, they've always been cool), and Overcast is the app to help you keep track of them all. The app also has awesome features like Voice Boost, which makes crappy-sounding podcasts less crappy-sounding, and Smart Speed that will cut out long periods of silence so you can actually do some damage to that backlog of podcasts you promised you'd catch up on. Oh, and if you want to make your own podcast, trying using another great app of 2014, Opinion. [iOS]

Acorns

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND
Oh man, investing. Every time I hear the word, I spontaneously get all sweaty and nervous. I'm terrible with money—fact—but Acorns helps me be less so. The app syncs with your credit and debit cards and rounds up every transaction to the nearest dollar, taking the change and making small micro investments. You can also select how aggressive or conservative you want to be with your investments. Acorns takes a $1 fee every month you're actively investing and a negligible management fee, depending on how much you invest. And if you want to get more involved with investing and stocks, take a look at Robinhood, which is a well-designed app that offers zero-commission trading. [iOS and Android]

Keezy Drummer






Making music is fun, and sometimes torturous, but mostly fun. That's the whole point of it, and Keezy Drummer perfectly encapsulates that idea. Through incredibly intuitive design and 12 different percussion samples, anyone (yes, even the musically challenged) can create beats that are actually pretty damn good. It's also addicting as hell, so that's a plus. [ iOS]

Fragment

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND
Photo apps are the most bloated category on any smartphone platform (except maybe games), but no photo app looks quite like this. Fragment is an app specifically designed to add trippy after effects to your photos. It takes a little getting used to and spotting what kind of picture is a good candidate for Fragment's acid-laced recreations can be tricky, but once you get the hang of it, your Instagram "likes" are going to quickly multiply. [iOS and Android]

Peek Calendar

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND
Ah yes, calendars. iOS has tons of them, and with iOS 8/Maverick, even the stock option ain't so bad. But none of them looks like the $2 Peek Calendar. Strangely enough, Peek would feel right at home with Google's Material Design, but this is an iOS-only affair. Peek makes your calendar as simple as possible, opting for gesture-based navigation rather than software buttons. There's a slight learning curve involved but it's worth it. It's best to listen to Yoda on this one: "You must unlearn what you have learned." [ iOS]

Theme+

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND
Sometimes, you just want to make smartphones pretty, and Theme+ just does that. My absolute favorite feature on Windows Phone are those constantly animated Live Tiles, they offer infinite possibility for customization and Theme+ is an app that lets you create beautiful backdrops for your homescreen. The app is $1.29, but if the geometric designs are to your liking, it's worth the plunge. [Windows Phone]

Wire

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND
Wire is the direction I want the future of messaging to take: beautifully designed, minimalist UI, and end-to-end encryption. Wire is my favorite messaging platform I've used this year outside of your general fare like Hangouts and iMessages. Wire does have a few things to fix, chief among them being video messaging, but the seamless way to share content, start voice calls, and chat in a great-looking messenger is the texting future I've been looking for. [iOS and Android]

Facebook Rooms

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND

Yes, we know. Another Facebook app. When I first heard about Rooms (and wrote about it), I wasn't sold at first. The idea seemed completely wrapped up in web 1.0 thinking, had absolutely no search feature, and the idea of using QR codes made me want to punch something. In December, the Rooms team added an Explore feature, so I decided to take another look. I have enough random hobbies (D&D, Japanese baseball, and collecting Fantastic Four comics from the 1960s) that rooms could be a very powerful tool. It does recreate that web 1.0 feeling where the internet made us all discover that we're not alone in what we like, and Rooms brings us together. [iOS]

Accompli

The Best Apps of 2014EXPAND
2014 saw lots of inbox innovation. Inbox by Gmail nabbed up most of the headlines, but Accompli, an email client for Android and iOS, is built to help you get some real work done. With easy access to your calendar, Microsoft Exchange support, and quick references to recently emailed contacts, Accompli is email at its most productive. Plus, Microsoft just bought them, so they most be onto something. If you're still searching for ways to get to inbox zero, Accompli can help. [iOS and Android]

HERE Beta








Google Maps is the reigning champ when it comes to smartphone cartography, but HERE Beta is going to try to upset the status quo. There are tons of reasons to love Nokia's mapping solution—great design, simple interface, speed-limit warning features—but its real claim to fame is it lets users download maps for offline use and can be used even without an internet connection. These maps also span the globe, making HERE Beta a pretty attractive option for people who find themselves abroad and don't want to rack up a fortune on their phone bill. 
Credits:gizmodo.com
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