Thursday, February 3, 2011

Android Market Web store Announced, Purchase Applications On the Desktop, Send to Phone

The Android Market Web store has been announced and is ready for release today. The system will allow users to purchase and download content from a web browser and then send the applications to their device.
To get to the web store, navigate to http://market.android.com. Here you can browse applications just as you would on an Android device.
When you click on the “Buy” button on the web page, you will be presented with the option for which device you would like to send the application to. The purchase dialog would then appear asking to confirm the purchase. Once the credit card transaction completes, the application will be sent (via cloud) to the devices that were selected.







T-Mobile Dell Streak 7 Released

For those of you who have been patiently awaiting the arrival of the new Android 2.2 Froyo 4G enabled tablet from Dell, namely the Dell Streak 7, your wait has now come to an end, as the Dell Streak 7 is now available.
According to an article over on Tmonews, the T-Mobile guys have released the Dell Streak 7 for purchase from T-Mobile.com and can be gained for handing over a reasonably low $199.99 based on a new two-year agreement of course and after a mail in rebate.
What can you expect from the Dell Streak 7 tablet? Well specs are a 7 inch multi-touch display, 1.33 megapixel front facing camera, Android 2.2 Froyo operating system which is upgradeable, so presumably will pack Android 3.0 Honeycomb eventually, Flash 10.1, WiFi, Bluetooth and 16GB of internal storage.
However if you can’t afford that $199.99 you could always opt for T-Mobile’s Equipment Instalment Plan, which will spread the cost of the device over 4 months and cost you $62.50 per month.
We have a Dell Streak 7 hands-on tour video below for your viewing pleasure courtesy of Jon4lakers that lasts almost five minutes…enjoy.

Google Body Browser App for Android Honeycomb: 3D Humans

Today at the Honeycomb Event (Android ecosystem) Event a new announcement surrounding Google Body got a lot of attention, they say that this new feature is like Google Maps of the Human Body.
Google Body for Honeycomb (Android 3.0 OS) is now official and is coming very soon, a demo was shown at the event how the whole system works and how new 3D graphics library in Android looked.
If you visit Google Labs you can see the Body Browser and we know that is great so to hear it is coming to Honeycomb Android operating system is even better news. Please let us know if you will be using it once it has been released.
Just like Google Maps you can take away layers only this time with humans, you can rotate in 3D and search body parts before having them highlighted in the app, strip the human right down and search for organs, bones, muscles and even click to identify anatomy.
For more information please visit Android Police and Android Community, we would love to hear from you about the new Google Body Browser for Honeycomb.

Galaxy Tab sees 15% return rate, iPad at 2%

Samsung’s Android-powered iPad competitor, the Galaxy Tab, is facing both slow sales and a high return rate, according to a new report. Citing data from ITG, the New York Post reports that the Tab saw a 15 percent return rate from its debut in November through January 16. The same data states that the iPad saw a return rate of only two percent over the same period. “Consumers aren’t in love with the [Galaxy Tab],” said Tony Berkman, a consumer tech analyst with ITG. Samsung recently announced it had sold two million Galaxy Tab units, but later clarified that statement, saying that was actually the number of devices it shipped to wireless companies and retailers, and adding that sales to consumers were “quite small.” Apple had sold 14.79 million iPads as of December 25, based on figures provided in its latest quarterly earnings release.

Google Music Player App for Android 3.0 Honeycomb

Google wish to make a difference with its Android platform and that is exactly what they are doing, welcome to the all-new Google Music Player for Android 3.0 Honeycomb.
Device Mag said that the new Google Music Player for Android is coming and they were right, and now EuroDroid reveal it all today with a few pictures. The new Android 3.0 Music Player has a smooth interface where new features such as a carousel/cover-flow display will show many albums stored on-screen.
Apple iTunes is very good and now it is Google’s turn to shine, the question is “Can They?” Your Android device will now be a fully functional media player and then some.
Google Music will come in the form of an app and we can see this be downloaded by the millions, hopefully all turns out well and for now we cannot tell you much but mark our words we will bring you more news about Google Music Player for Android 3.0 Honeycomb.
Check out more features within Android 3.0 such as Homescreen, Books and Music App via Androidica.

Samsung Introduces New Galaxy Android Phone To India

Samsung is busy busy busy. We are anxiously awaiting all their announcements at MWC in 2 weeks. We will be there live to bring you all the action.  Meanwhile though, they’ve released 4 new European Galaxy Android models and now they’ve introduced the new Galaxy Pop a midrange device to India.
The Galaxy Pop was introduced on flipkart.com as a pre-order due to ship in the second week of February.
The Samsung Galaxy Pop features a 3.14″ capacitive touch screen at 240×320 pixels, a 3.15 megapixel camera with video recording and a 600mhz processor. Onboard storage is limited to 160mb but expandable via microsd to 32gb.

Android Market is now fully accessible from the web

The Honeycomb livestream is still running at the moment, but we thought you would want to hear this right away.
The Android Market, the whole Android Market, is finally available on the web. We are still digging through and will give you a more in depth take on it later, but it features almost everything users have been clamoring for since Android launched including:
  • Search with filters for pricing, popularity and relevance.
  • Purchases made on the web simply pop up a notification on your phone
  • Ability to tweet or share links to your favorite apps
Right now you can view the Market, but so far we haven’t had any luck signing in to actually download anything so again we’ll be following up later with a thorough tour of the new Market.
We know a lot of you have been waiting for this for a long time so take a spin around the Market and let us know what you think.
Visit the official Android Market site

Ultimate Music Quiz trivia game needs beta testers

XDA member migalito has developed an app called Ultimate Music Quiz, which tests players on their knowledge of various music clips within a set time limit. Although this is not a brand new concept, trivia games like these can be extremely addicting.
Ultimate Music Quiz is an aesthetically pleasing and well-designed game for HVGA Android devices. However, the project was just recently completed. The developer wants beta testers to use the app before it is released on Android Market.
If you’re interested in being a beta tester for Ultimate Music Quiz, visit the game’s thread and get in contact with the developer.

Google’s Honeycomb Event Coverage



Google’s Honeycomb Event just wrapped up, and while we weren’t able to be there for the live show — yes, we got an invite, but our staff, sadly, was unable to attend — we caught the live streaming event and are happy to sum-up the basics for you.
Andy Rubin kicked off the event, introducing  Honeycomb officially, and saying a few brief words, including Google’s excitement at Android’s growth.  The number of Android devices at CES shocked even them, and they are thrilled about what the future holds.  Rubin then introduced Hugo Barra, who showed off some of Honeycomb’s new features.
Hugo’s opening statement was that their “approach for android has been to equip developers with the best possible toolkit that we can build, and then get out of their way.”  The Honeycomb dev team is encouraging innovation, ideally way outside anything they’ve ever thought of, from the developer community.  Then he showed off the main new features of Android 3.0.  First he pointed to the bottom-left of the screen with the back button, the home button, and a “multitask” button that will give you quick access to the last several applications you have run.  Also in the bottom-right the refined notification area.  Rather than being at the top of the screen, notifications have been moved to the lower-right bar, where not only have the notifications been streamlined to be even less intrusive, but more information is given.  When receiving IMs, your contacts picture is displayed along with the first snippet of the message.  When the music player is active in the background, the music player notification can pause and play.  This is also where the quick settings panel is located, giving you easy access to airplane mode, wifi, etc.  He also showed off the new “stacked” widgets, which let you scroll through the information you want by swiping panels down to access the ones behind them, be they bookmarks, pictures, popular Youtube videos, or news articles.
Hugo also talked about “application fragments,” which are basically panes built into applications that interwork to put the focus on the most important information, but also allowing easier navigation.  The example he used to highlight this was the Gmail app.  On the left pane was a list of labels, with the inbox being on the central-most, focused pane.  When a message is selected, it becomes the focus, with the left page being the inbox.  When viewing the inbox, messages can be dragged from the central pane to the left pane for quick access to assigning labels.  Also when viewing the inbox, at the top there is an application bar that gives various choices for actions taken based on what’s selected.  A search bar when viewing the whole inbox, which might change to global actions as messages are selected — archive, star, etc.
About this time in the presentation, Hugo also talked about how existing applications will run perfectly in Honeycomb on the tablet, as that has been one of the biggest focuses of the Honeycomb development team.  He showed off Fruit Ninja to demonstrate this — the exact version available in the market today, built before development on Honeycomb had even started.
Honeycomb is highly optimized to maximize performance, and hardware acceleration can be enabled with one line of code.  Honeycomb is also bringing new animation frameworks, to add new transition effects in various apps, and also the homescreen.  I immediately noticed the transition effects, as the one shown reminds me of the one just added to LauncherPro that gives the appearance of having the various homescreens on the inside of a cube.  Honeycomb also features a  new graphics engine, called Renderscript.  It is the foundation for the interface, including the  new Youtube and Books apps that display information in a carousel-type effect.  Renderscript also supports multi-core processing at kernel level.  At this point, he showed off several 3D applications: Maps, music (also sporting a carousel interface, like the Youtube app), and Google Body, which is much like the Google Maps of human anatomy – it even features layers, like muscles, skeletal, and the circulatory system.
At this point, Thomas Williamson, CEO of game development company War Drum Studios, to show off the 3D graphics on Honeycomb.  He showed off the games Monster Madness —  an adaptation of the PS3 hack-and-slash shooter — and Great Battles, Medieval, which is a History Channel strategy game with massive battles, and is the first game that will use both cores in dual-core devices.


Back to Hugo: The new camera app features a full UI built to allow access to everything you’d want right at your fingers, including take video and upload directly to Youtube.  He also showed off the video chat app, and said there’s been a huge focus on image stabilization.












Then he brought to the stage Louis Gump, the Vice-President of  Mobile at CNN.  It was his task to show off the video capabilities of the Android tablet.  He showed off CNN’s tablet app.
  • Up to 350 stories in one sheet
  • Includes live video streaming
  • Current stories
  • iReports – featuring the ability to upload your own iReport (as demo’d by Lila)










The OS platform is just half the story, the other half being how to get that platform to the audience, and Chris Yerga is brought forward to cover that side of the story.
Chris talks about changes to the Android Market, which were made to aid users and developers.  Chief among these is the Android Market webstore, which will allow users to browse the market from their PC, and purchase and  install directly from web.  On the homepage is a carousel showcasing featured apps.  Click on an app and get the app’s page, featuring a description, screenshots, user reviews.  From here, much as with Appbrain, you can buy the app directly, at which point the webstore will ask which device to install to via a selection drop-down, and can be filtered by compatible devices.  There is also a link to share via Twitter. Links tweeted work from the phone as well, pulling up the market page on the device.  The webstore also allows search, filter by paid/freeapps, by device compatibility of all devices you have registered with your Google account, and by app popularity. It also features a “My market account” section, which has a list of all applications purchased before. It also allows you to give your devices nicknames, for easy reference.  The market webstore is live now and can be found at market.android.com.
Also changing is how users can purchase content: Apps can be listed at various prices for various currencies, with the ability for developers to specify the price in each supported currency.  This is being rolled out on a staggered basis, and it’s possible for developers to ignore this and let things continue as they currently function.  In response to developers’ request for additional ways to monetize their apps, Googe has built an in-app purchase SDK. Bart Decrem with Disney Mobile is one of the devs who has been working with the Android team on this, and he was brought forward to show off the tech.  He talked about three Disney Mobile apps they’ve developed for Android: Radio Disney, JellyCar, and Tap Tap Revenge.  The latter is a Guitar Hero-type game that sells songs in-app, and will be available for all devices running Android 2.1 or later. Bart also mentioned that they had the in-app purchase SDK for about five days before they had it fully functional within Tap Tap Revolution, citing its thoroughness as being the main reason they were able to get it completed so quickly.  The dev code for the in-app purchasing SDK releases today.
At this point, they wrapped up with Hugo finally doing a little more chat with “LadyKiller,” who was none othe than Grammy-winning artist Cee Lo.  Hugo’s closing statement was that at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, there will be over 50 devs showing off the Honeycomb apps that they’ve been working on.  Then they let everyone present go play with the 15 Xoom tablets that they had in the back room, but obviously that wasn’t shown in the video.  Made me wish, yet again, that I had been present.
So, that’s basically what’s new with the Honeycomb OS, built from the ground up for tablets. Highlights will be posted soon at the Android Youtube page.  We’ll be seeing more and more of it in the next few weeks, so stay tuned and we’ll keep you posted.