Monday, August 22, 2011

LG Optimus Sol Press Shots Leak

Say hello to the first official press shots of the LG Optimus Sol (aka LG Victor E730). The Optimus Sol was first spotted in this leaked roadmap including an LG Prada remake running Android. While we are still searching for more details it should be a decent little mid-range offering although someone should probably tell LG they forgot the LED flash. Who does that these days?



It looks a bit like an iPhone and the Samsung Vibrant made a baby if you ask me. While the Optimus Sol we are seeing now looks quite a bit different than the original leak we are left wondering if the internal specs have changed as much as the outside, but we can’t know for sure.
Original reports suggested a 3.8″ AMOLED display, a decent little 1 Ghz processor under the hood with a 5 MP rear camera with VGA front all running nicely on Android 2.3 Gingerbread. This would make the Sol line up as a nice mid-high end offering and should make for a good price too. With dual-core phones slowly becoming the norm, we could see something like this be the new Optimus One as their lower offering but only time will tell.
[via PocketNow]

Motorola Droid Bionic Hitting Best Buy Soon?

More Bionic news, we are now seeing the phone officially show up all around parts of Best Buy. From right on their website to a few magazine ads. It’s safe to say it is coming soon but then we already knew that right? We’ve been hearing it for months and months. Best Buy’s September buyers guide is all about the Droid Bionic and they have it front and center.



While we don’t learn anything new here they just rehash what we already know. That this juicy phone will have a 4.3″ qHD display, 4G LTE, a dual-core powerhouse CPU and all that other good stuff we’ve come to love. With more and more ads like this officially outing the specs as well as the September release date it almost feels confirmed, although we still don’t have anything truly official.
The Bionic is now officially also on the Verizon website front page. With that and the recent rumor of a September 8th launch at $299 you poor souls patiently waiting have less than 20 days — if the rumors are true of course. So get excited, cash in that change bucket, or clear out your ashtray of quarters because the time is coming. Sadly we have seen rumors of it launching at $299 while we all were hoping for something a little lower. This is Verizon’s first dual-core 4G LTE phone so I guess we should have all expected to pay a premium. Will you be buying the Bionic? Or holding out for something else?
[via Droid-Life]

HP TouchPad Android Ports Already Under Way


I must say for $99 crisp dollar bills, the HP TouchPad rocking Android would be a pretty awesome deal. That would be a great price for a tablet and once we get some Honeycomb or Ice Cream Sandwich running on it everyone will be glad they snagged one for $99 dollars. After HP discontinued the TouchPad it went on a firesale and is now in the bargain bin. The specs compare to that of the HTC Sensation with that 1.2 Ghz dual-core Qualcomm processor, but with a 9.7″ 1024×768 IPS display. All that running Android sounds like something I’d be okay with.



An Android port for the TouchPad has already started and is picking up huge traction over the last 24-48 hours. With it now selling for $99 or $149 at HP.com we now have a game of “The Price is Right” and all we need is the Android OS. Over at RootzWiki the project has about 90 pages of interest after a day and a half, they are calling it TouchDroid. While some reports have claimed the hardware was to blame and not the webOS we all are still left wondering. Once we get Android 2.3 Gingerbread, CM7, and eventually Honeycomb running on this thing we’ll really know for sure.
While almost everything that has hit the market as of late has had a few geeks trying to port Android over, the TouchPad is in a much better position because so many have it and that price is just so stellar. I’m sure somewhere there is already a bit of progress on a full port, but the team at RootzWiki has a nice group of four developers and this is only the beginning. I’m sure once a few webOS developers that also love Android get around to talking with them things should start to move along a bit quicker. This wont be an easy task and the devs have plenty of work cut out for them. Be nice, be patient and feel free to head over to RootzWiki and show your support. (Thanks oGsSTC)
$99 dollar Android 3.2 Honeycomb TouchDroid Tablet — Put me down for two!

Sunday, August 21, 2011

100 Best iPhone Games Ever : 20-1

20. Groove Coaster
By Taito
Released July 2011
Groove Coaster
Groove Coaster is so new that it feels odd to be making such as huge impact on our top 100 games chart, but it's just so darn fun we couldn't rank it any lower. Using the visual style seen in Space Invaders: Infinity Gene, playing Groove Coaster is hypnotic - a visual trip you can easily lose yourself to. Gameplay-wise, it's incredibly simple. You have to track the movement of a little on-screen fish-like creature as it tears along a linear track. Then tap the screen whenever a blip comes into contact with it. It doesn't feature famous tracks though - for that kind of rhythm action you're better off with Tap Tap Revenge.

19. Infinity Blade
By Chair Entertainment
Released December 2010
Infinity Blade
Infinity Blade made such an impact at release because of one main thing - its fantastic graphics. But there's a great game hidden under all the gloss too. It's a one-on-one battle game where you progress through a ruined castle, taking on enemies of increasing difficulty. Fall in battle and you return as your previous character's descendant, complete with any experience gained. Clever stuff (although admittedly a recipe for repetition.) It was the first full iPhone game to make use of the UT3 engine.

18. Superbrothers: Sword & Sworcery
By Capybara Games
Released April 2011
Superbrothers
A game that pleads you to don your headphones rather than playing in silence, Capybara's Superbrothers is as much a sensory experience as a game. You wake up with no idea of who your sword-wielding 8-bit style character is, and the truth is only uncovered bit-by-bit through carefully directed, very arty story segments. The gameplay is a blend of action, adventure and screen prodding. It's the atmosphere, great sound and enchanting visuals that make this game so great though.

17. Tiny Wings

By Andreas Illiger
Released February 2011
Tiny Wings
One of just a few casual games that managed to dethrone the Angry Birds mob in the last year, Tiny Wings stormed to the top of the charts in early 2011. It's a momentum-based game where you send a bird soaring over mountains. Oddly enough, though, you don't really fly, just glide. Your only control is in pressing down on the touchscreen to make our avian hero point downwards towards the earth to pick up speed. In spite of the birdie link and reliance on pre-empting gravity, Tiny Wings is nothing like Angry Birds. Which is why we love it so.

16. Space Invaders: Infinity Gene

By Taito
Released July 2009
Space Invaders
The iPhone gaming scene has made a comfy home for classic games, letting crusty gamers like us reappraise their charms for just a couple of quid. A few classics have been given the full spruce-up makeover treatment though. Space Invaders: Infinity Gene is our top pick. It starts off just like the 1978 classic, but soon descends into modern shooter madness, the screen filling with both colour and enemies.

15. N.O.V.A. 2
By Gameloft
Released December 2010
NOVA 2
The original N.O.V.A. was perhaps the first game to fully convince us that first-person shooters would work on the iPhone's 3.5in touchscreen, and its successor improved upon it with improved graphics and more diverse gameplay. For those new to the N.O.V.A. series, it's best thought of as "a bit like Halo". You're part of the Near Orbit Vanguard Alliance and have to battle an army of invading aliens. Exciting stuff.

14. Glyder 2
By Glu
Released Dec 2009
Glyder 2
One of the most relaxing games on iPhone, Glyder 2 sees you fly around a fantasy environment, collecting orbs and unlocking more of the game's world. Although only loosely tied-in to a story, it's fantastically engaging thanks to its colourful, free-roaming world. For longer-term gaming, Glyder 2 also offers additional challenges to complete, further packing this world full of fun. Glu has pulled the game from the App Store due to serious software issues with iOS4, and has no plans to fix this. It's a crying shame because this is an all-time favourite of ours.

13. Rolando 2
By ngmoco
Released July 2009
Rolando 2
Rolando was the series that cemented ngmoco’s reputation for quality back in early 2009. It’s a platform game designed from the ground up for touchscreen input. You need to deliver the Rolandos safely to the exit of each level by tilting your device to get them rolling along, and flicking upwards on the screen to make them jump. Boasting fabulously stylish visuals and a soundtrack supplied by Mr. Scruff, Rolando 2 is utterly charming.

12. Angry Birds Rio
By Rovio
Released March 2011
Angry Birds Rio
The third game in the Angry Birds series is the best, with more dynamic gameplay and more ambitious level design. It needs no introduction, but in case you’re completely new to iOS gaming, it’s an ultra-casual game where you fling birds into pigs hiding in buildings. You need to blast all of them to finish a level. Why? Because they’re mean and nasty and green, and they stole your eggs. The story is nonsense of course, but the gameplay is perfectly honed for mobile gaming sessions that you mean to last for five minutes, but end up going on for hours.  250 million downloads on, the series is still going strong.

11. Jet Car Stunts
By True Axis
Released Nov 2009
Jet Car Stunts
A brilliant blend of racing and platforming, Jet Car Stunts is quite unlike most other car games on the App Store. In some levels, the time you take to get to the finish line doesn't even matter, just making it there. The tracks are suspended over a cloudy abyss, so if you fall down it's bad news for your vehicle. There are also time trial challenges if you can't let go of that traditional racing style. The only other racers you drive against are ghost cars from your, and other racers', previous attempts, which helps to keep the action super-smooth even on an older-gen iOS devices.

10. Sonic & Sega All-Stars Racing
By Sega
Released June 2011
Sonic and Sega
Who would have thought the best Mario Kart game on iPhone would come from Sega? Great 3D graphics, superb controls and a fab structure mean Sonic & Sega All-Stars Racing obliterates all the Mario Kart copies that have come before it – and there were more than a few.  The game includes 10 characters from the Sonic universe, and 15 tracks. Forget Crash Bandicoot Nitro Kart, Cro-Mag Rally and Shrek Kart, this is the best kart racer in town.

9. GTA: Chinatown Wars
By Rockstar Games
Released January 2010
Chinatown Wars
In 2009 Gameloft effectively made a Grand Theft Auto game in Gangstar: West Coast Hustle. But the next year, Rockstar bettered it with its own official entry. Harking back to the old days of the series, in the series’s first three instalments (Grand Theft Auto, GTA 2 and 1969), it’s a top-down perspective game, but is still gorgeous thanks to its 3D rendered visuals. You are Huang Lee, beaten, robbed and left with nothing on entry to Liberty City. Plenty of cars, plenty of guns, plenty of humour.

8. World of Goo
By 2D Boy
Released April 2011
World of Goo
A multi-award-winning indie game, World of Goo offers one of the best uses of physics ever seen in a game. You have to save blobs of goo by sticking them together to make a bridge leading to the goo collector at the end of each level. The real-ife principles of bridge building really work here, so careful thinking really pays off. Visually inventive, infinitely cheerful and ruddy good fun, this is undoubtedly one of the very best iOS puzzle games.

7. Zen Bound 2
By Secret Exit
Released April 2010
Zen Bound 2
One of the iPhone’s most blessed-out titles, Zen Bound 2 is a game without action or explosions. Without boss fights or even enemies. All you do is wrap a rope around an object, using the touchscreen and accelerometer to slowly turn the object around. It could be a duck, it could be a teddy bear – your only aim is to cover as much of its surface as possible using as little rope as you can. Progress isn’t really the point though. Just let the chilled-out music sink in and feel your heartbeat slow riiiight down. Ahhh...

6. Peggle
By Popcap
Released May 2009
Peggle
Popcap has a curious knack of getting its games on every platform under the sun, and Peggle is no exception. You fire a metal ball bearing into an arrangement of pegs, hoping that the laws of physics are on your side and it’ll hit a good few of them before flying down into the abyss below. Some say it’s a game of chance but there’s more skill than you might imagine to this genial puzzler. The expansion pack Peggle Nights is also available as an in-app purchase.

5. Space Miner: Space Ore Bust

By Venan Entertainment
Released February 2010
Space Miner
Space Miner: Space Ore Bust (geddit?) was a game that came out of nowhere. Its creator Venan Entertainment was primarily a contract developer, making games for big publishers like EA, but its own title blew most of its previous game out of the water. It’s part space adventure, part twin-stick shooter, part roleplaying game – and all awesome. You start off with a tiny ship, pootling around the galaxy as the relative of a space outpost owner, helping out by mining for space ore. Soon enough a much larger plot starts to unravel. As you explore, and loot, the 50 space sectors in the game, you get to equip and upgrade your ship, finally ending up with a nimble asteroid-obliterating deathcraft.

4. Plants Vs. Zombies
By Popcap
Released February 2010
Plants vs. Zombies
Popcap’s reponse to the tower defence craze isn’t really a tower defence game at all. You have to defend your house from the incoming hordes of zombies, approaching in mindless rows. And all you have at your disposal is plants. Really aggressive plants, mind. There are 49 different varieties to use. You earn new types after every level, keeping the gameplay fresh throughout the 50 levels. It’s dangerously addictive, deliciously fun.

3. Cut the Rope

By Zeptolabs
Released October 2010
Cut the Rope
Although labelled by some as the thinking person’s alternative to Angry Birds, it’s not much like Rovio’s casual classic. In each level, you have to guide a sweet into a little green creature’s mouth. He’s called Om Nom. The key tool at your disposal is gravity. The sweetie is suspended above Om Nom with ropes, and swipes across these ropes break them. It’s not quite as simple as swiping across them in the right order though – timing is key. Throughout the 200 levels, there are plenty of additional objects to complicate matters, like bubbles and springs.

2. Real Racing 2
By Firemint
Released December 2010


Still the best realistic racer on iPhone, Real Racing 2 proved that Firemint really can’t put a foot (or tire) wrong. Offering seriously advanced racing physics, fully-licensed cars and full 16-car races, fans of Gran Turismo 5 or Forza Motorsport on Xbox 360 or PS3 will find a lot to like here. EA’s and Gameloft’s rivals offer a bubblier first-person campaign, but if it’s a proper racing game you’re after, there’s only really one game to pick.

1. Monkey Island 2: Special Edition

By LucasArts
Released July 2010
Monkey Island 2
The definitive 90s graphic adventure, LucasArts’s Monkey Island 2 once again follows the trials of the pirate Guybrush Threepwood as he battles the ghost pirate LeChuck and struggles to win back the love of Elaine Marley. If you haven’t played it before – where have you been? The fantastic new special edition has completely re-drawn visuals, a control scheme that really works on the 3.5in touchscreen and an all-new speech track. It’s brilliant.

Sprint’s BlackBerry Bold 9930 just $199.99 online


Sprint has never been known to follow convention. While other carriers are milking heavy data users for as much as possible, for example, Sprint is standing strong and maintaining its unlimited data plans for as long as possible. Another example: Sprint announced the BlackBerry Bold 9930 last week, stating that it would charge customers $249.99 on contract for the device. The nation’s No. 3 carrier made the device available on Sunday as promised, but the phone is actually priced lower online than Sprint announced; just $199.99 will score you RIM’s latest flagship smartphone from Sprint’s online shop. Oddly, the same $200 can also land you an old Bold 9650 if you have an aversion to touchscreens and gorgeous hardware. Sprint’s Torch 9850 launched at the promised $149.99, but we can’t imagine opting for it over the Bold 9930 for just $50 more. Interested parties may want to hit the read link quickly in case Sprint has a change of heart.
Thanks, CJ
Read

CyanogenMod will continue as always, Everyone can relax

Recently the entire Android community and especially the fans and developers were hit with huge news, that Steve Kondik (aka Cyanogen) was hired by Samsung Mobile. While this is amazing news and everyone is most likely happy for Steve I’ve seen plenty of comments as of late that some are worried this might affect CyanogenMod as a whole.



Right off the bat I saw Twitter comments from tons of worried fans that don’t want to see the project wither away and die. After the news broke we quickly reminded everyone that they have a huge team and nothing will change. Today the team behind CyanogenMod themselves have confirmed this exact thing with the “State of CyanogenMod” blog post. Basically confirming everything we already said and linked to above. They all have day jobs, families, friends, and other responsibilities and in the end this is a hobby — something they love and will continue to do.

With key members of CyanogenMod busy with life things have been a little slow, but in no way is anything changing. They have a huge community of supporters and developers alike that will continue to churn out amazing updates and fixes for all of our favorite devices (just like my image above). We’ve seen recent video of CM7 on the Sensation 4G, progress on the Motorola Atrix now the bootloader has been unlocked, and even the LG Optimus 3D is set to receive CyanogenMod.
Everything over in cyan land should continue just as it always has. Users don’t need to worry that their devices will stop being supported out of the blue or that Samsung will effect the project, because they wont from what we are hearing. This has all been mentioned over on the CyanogenMod Blog today and I just wanted to share the news and help spread the good word.
Bring on CM7 for my Sensation, I can’t wait!

Sprint Could be the First Carrier to See the Galaxy S II


A source out of SprintFeed tells us that Sprint could be the first US carrier to launch the Galaxy S II, dubbing it the Epic Touch 4G. Disregarding the odd name, the Epic Touch 4G is shaping up to be a very respectable phone, capable of holding its own against other superphones. We’re excited to see it launch on the 9th, and initial previews for the device seem to be positive. Here’s hoping Samsung has some good news for us on the 29th at their launch event.

HTC & Apple Cut Forecasts Amidst Bad Economy



The fact that Google announced they were buying Motorola for $12.5 billion dollars on Monday, and HP announced they were killing webOS on Thursday highlight what a topsy turvy economy we are in right now.
If you don’t pay attention to any news besides Android news than you may not know that the stock market as a whole hasn’t been doing very well. President Obama had to have the debt ceiling raised, and the US had their credit rating lowered. Yes we’re in a bad economic time right now. That’s why two patent rivals, Apple and HTC, have both cut their outlooks for 2011.
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HTC has such a great first and second quarter that they raised their 2011 forecast from 50 million devices to 70 million devices. They have recently lowered that forecast to 60 million devices. Which again isn’t bad considering it’s 10 million more devices than they had originally planned. All this info is coming from Digitimes based on part supply orders in Asia for both HTC and Apple.

Although there were no specific numbers, Digitimes reports that despite the fact that the iPhone 5 is rumored to come out in October, Apple has scaled down orders for handset parts and components at the end of the third quarter.
Source: Digitimes

[Exclusive Download] Official Gingerbread Build For The HTC Droid Incredible


We've been talking about Gingerbread for the Droid Incredible and its on-again-off-again status quite a bit lately, but after the official support docs showed up on VZW's site, we had confirmation of what we knew all along: the update is alive and kicking. It was rumored that it would start rolling out OTA-style earlier in the week but was delayed for unknown reasons, leaving Incredible owners without their cookie-filled upgrade just a little bit longer.
Fortunately, the wait is over, as we've received and exclusive leak of the Gingerbread RUU from a giving tipster. This looks like the final build, as it shares all the same version number from Verizon's documentation (4.06.605.2), as well as the same baseband (2.15.10.07.07).
Before we get to the download, here is a quick reminder of what this update brings (aside from Gingerbread):
  • MMS Messages send correctly

  • Successfully play audio files from a message

  • Send Vcard through SMS

  • Internet connections via Bluetooth now enabled

  • VZ Navigator now operates over Wi-Fi

  • Change songs in the Music widget by tapping the forward button

  • Camera functions successfully without inserting SD card

Be aware that this is a full RUU, so it does require a full wipe to flash and it will break root.
There is no word on whether or not this version can easily be rooted, but we've pinged a few people and will update as soon as we hear something back.
With that out of the way, I present to you : Gingerbread for the Droid Incredible!
Installation Instructions:
  • Download this file (Mirror) (MD5: 096d841530dd2f223ef4a1b701c7d429)

  • Rename the file to PB32IMG.zip

  • Drop it on the root of the SD Card

  • Boot into the bootloader

  • Flash as usual

As always, you assume all risk if you choose to flash this. Android Police is not responsible if you brick, break, destroy, set fire to, or otherwise render your device useless... but how often could that happen?