Headlines

3 years ago

Pandora Works On Rooted Nook

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Oh boy, this is going to get good fast. You already knew that the Nook, Barnes and Noble's e-reader, had been rooted, right? Well, that was only step one. Some users at nookDevs are reporting that they've managed to get Pandora Radio running and working on the Nook. That means a real life, breathing Android app is running on the Nook, which means more real life, breathing Android apps are eventually on their way. It's still a difficult process to do but the Nook may soon house all the apps that make Android great.

The Nook is probably the most interesting e-book reader on the market right now, to have a legion of users hacking and tinkering it to make it the most powerful, well, where can we buy one? Oh wait...you can't right now. Good going Barnes & Noble.

[via gizmodo]

 
3 years ago

Google offers to clean up your contacts

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Gmail contacts

At the heart Android is, of course, Google. And that means gmail, which we love, as well as Google contacts, which we loathe. It's completely normal to end up with multiple contacts for a single person (I think I have five for Casey). Google has had the ability for a while now to merge contacts. But now things are even easier.

When you go to your contacts, you should see something like the above. Hit the "Find duplicates" button, and it does so, taking much of the work out of your hands. From there, it will merge duplicate contacts, leaving things slightly less messy. It's still not perfect, but it's definitely a step in the right direction. [via jkontherun]

 
3 years ago

Entourage Edge e-reader sports dual e-ink, LED screens, runs Android

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Entourage Edge

Sure, the Barnes & Noble Nook is cool and all (and even cooler now that it's been rooted). But who wants one screen when you can have two? (Why, that's twice as many!)

Enter the Entourage Edge, which CNET's Ina Fried got her hands on recently.

Reminiscent of the non-announced, exists-only-in-leaks Microsoft Courier, the 3-pound Edge sports dual screens that let you flip information from one to the other. The screen on the left is e-ink, 9. inches at 1200x825 pixels. On the right is an LED screen, 10.1 inches at 1024x600.

WiFi b/g are on board, and it has an SD card slot and a pair of USB ports, in addition to a 3.5mm headphone jack. The Entourage Edge also supports Bluetooth and USB keyboards.

As the device is Android in nature, you can run Market apps on the right-hand side. All in all, pretty cool for something that weighs just 2.5 pounds. Price, on the other hand, may be an issue, with the Edge, erm, edging toward $500. But, you get a lot more screen for the money.

Entourage says the Edge will be available in February 2010.

[Entourage via CNet]

 
3 years ago

Moto Droid Photos, Top 5 Apps, Carriers, Android 2.0 on HTC Eris

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From the Forums is a great way for you, our readers, to see the hottest topics being discussed. But you must be a registered member. Becoming a member is a simple process. So if you have not already already done so, head on over and register now!

See you in the forums!

 
3 years ago

Beautiful Widgets is no more

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Beautiful Widgets

Our man Jeremy broke the bad news to us this morning: As you can see above, Beautiful Widgets is no more. It basically made your Android home screen look like HTC's Sense UI (which you get on the Droid Eris and Hero lines, as well as on newer Windows phones), but it seems developer LevelUp Studio got a nastygram from some HTC suits. Can't really say that surprises us, but it is disappointing given how much you (and us) loved it. Sorry, everybody. [Twitter]

 
3 years ago

Evernote now available in Android Market

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Evernote for AndroidEvernote for Android

Evernote -- the uber-popular note-taking application on Windows, Mac, BlackBerry, the Palm Pre and, of course, the iPhone and iPod Touch -- is now available on Android.

In a nutshell, for those of you not familiar, Evernote is a one-stop note-taking machine. You take notes, you tag them, put them in virtual notebooks. Your notes sync across the web, mobile apps and desktop apps. Evernote has optical character recognition (OCR) so you can take a picture of a wine label, upload it and it becomes searchable. (Pair that with Google Goggles and, well, wow ...)

Evernote is free, though there is a premium option that gives you up to 500MB a month in uploads, supports more file types, has increased security (though all accounts use SSL encryption) and includes PDF searching. The premium service is $5 a month or $45 for a year. Available now in the Android Market.

 
3 years ago

Video of the Nexus One booting up

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Here's a brief video of the Nexus One booting up. Not much to say about that, other than the boot animation is colorful and splashy, but we already knew that. Note that it's sitting on top of what could be the box. [via TheNexusOne]

 
3 years ago

Possible shot of the Nexus One box

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Nexus One box?

It's not an unboxing. It's just ... a box. Bot a box with the words "Nexus One" (no, we're not going all lowercase with that anytime soon). Note the colors of the "X" in Nexus, which match up nicely with the boot screen animation we saw last night.

One more shot after the break, though it's not much to look at. We're just sayin'.

[Droiddog via TheNexusOne and TMoNews]

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3 years ago

Google trademarks 'Nexus One'

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Nexus One trademark

Here's another log to throw onto the fire of whether it's really the Google Nexus One or the HTC Nexus One, or what carrier involvement may be:

It's Google that applied for a trademark on "Nexus One" on Dec. 10, before all the hoopla began, pointing toward the Big G doing more on its own. Does it will be selling the Nexus One outright? Or that carriers won't be involved? Nope. Those questions are still very much unanswered, and we could still see an "HTC Passion" or some other similar device in the future. Stay tuned, folks.

AndroidOS.in via Electronista

 
3 years ago

Early video look at Swype on Android

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Swype has been given the what-for on Windows Mobile for a while now, and it's gained a bit of a following, coming standard on the Samsung Omnia II. For the uninitiated, it's an on-screen keyboard on which you drag your finger across the screen instead of picking it up every time you type a letter.

MobileCrunch has gotten an early look at Swype on the Verizon Droid Eris, and it looks exactly the same as what I've used on Windows Mobile (as it should). If you've never used Swype, it's a very odd feeling. I'm not sold on it, but to each his own. (And it should be noted that you can still use it as a normal keyboard.)

What do you guys think? Anybody else used Swype?

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