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Samsung’s Terrain Home launcher mixes a bit of everything

Samsung has its own TouchWiz homescreen exclusive to its smartphones so it comes as a bit of a surprise to see a new homescreen launcher replacement that has been funded by the manufacturer's startup accelerator. But will Terrain Home actually be able to make a name for itself in the crowded homescreen marketplace? Perhaps it could, if the subset of features it seems to have picked off from other launchers resonate with you.



Aviate without the brains. Fasthlane without the tiles. Everything.me without the recommendations. GEL without Google Now. It is almost hard to pin down Terrain Home to a single description because of the mix of features that it possesses, some of which seem to be inspired by other homescreen alternatives. But Terrain Home bills itself as a launcher that simplifies your smartphone by putting everything in a single place, and to that extent, it might have actually succeeded.


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The two core features that Terrain Home is selling users is Search and Sidebar, though those two are, ironically, actually not front and center of the homescreen. By default, your homescreen will actually look like any other AOSP-based homescreen, Trebuchet or Google Experience Launcher, except for three rather new and conspicuous icons above the dock that also take you to the launcher's main features.. However, all the main features of the launcher is just a swipe gesture away. Swiping up will take you to Search. Swiping to the right will bring up the App list. Going the opposite direction will land you in Sidebar. And to keep things balanced, swiping down will unroll the Notification panel.


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The Search feature is brain dead simple. Search-as-you-type will show up results coming from your Apps and Contacts, but if you want to do more, you can tap to search on Google, Maps, Play Store, Yelp, and YouTube. It is a bit like Everything.me's pervasive search functionality, except it isn't the core focus of the launcher and it doesn't make smart recommendations. It is also a bit like Google Search or Google Now, minus the voice recognition part. And speaking of voice, it is quite interesting that, by default, Terrain Home puts a homescreen shortcut to Voice Search instead of Samsung's own S Voice equivalent.



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Compared to Search, the Sidebar is more active and more dynamic. This feature is like a mishmash of cards from Google Now or Aviate and dynamic content from Nokia's Fastlane. In fact, Terrain Home does call them "Cards". Here you can edit cards, add some, remove some, or rearrange some. Cards range from static content like Toolboxes for the most commonly used settings to forever changing ones like a Facebook feed, Weather, News, and even a world clock. There are different categories of Cards you can choose from, but it is a limited list. There will be noticeable things that are missing, like Email, Messages, Twitter, or Google+. The good news is that these cards are practically just Web apps and Terrain Home will soon be releasing an SDK for developers to add their own cards. Whether or not they will have to submit those to a curated Card store is still unknown.



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The center homescreen might look plain and simple, but as the adage goes, looks can be deceiving. That space is surprisingly quite customizable, unlike other launchers that curtail your freedom in exchange for their own unique paradigms. Here you might see some resemblance to AOSP or Trebuchet, where you can set up a wallpaper, add widgets, and group shortcuts into folders. You can even add more homescreens if you wish, though that will naturally require more swipes to get to the Sidebar or the App list on the right, which looks eerily a lot like Aviate's. But Terrain Home goes beyond that. You can actually configure the number of rows and columns that will make up the homescreen grid, and even increase the number of dock icons to a maximum of 7.




Terrain Home, however, is far from perfect. Those used to smart contextual features from Aviate or Everything.me won't find it here. The voice-activated trigger of Google Now Launcher is also nowhere to be found. It also strangely disables the menu button of devices, relocating such functionality to a long press on the home screen or the App list overflow menu, breaking standard Android conventions. Terrain Home, however, remains an interesting and fresh option for those who won't feel the loss of the features too much. But best of all, it is free and isn't exclusive to Samsung devices. Theoretically, it should work with and any Android device running Android 4.1 and later, though exact availability and compatibility might vary.


Download: Terrain Home on Google Play Store

SOURCE: Terrain Home


Javelin Browser brings true multitasking to the table

It seems like Link Bubble's "background loading" idea is catching on, at least on non-mainstream Android browsers. Javelin Browser, the rather curious gesture-based browser we encountered last March, is just one of the few to add this functionality, boldly calling it a "true multitasking" feature.



Compared to most Android web browsers like Firefox, Chrome, or even Dolphin, Javelin might seem a bit small. Nonetheless, it still offered some unique and interesting features built right into the app itself, like Ad Block and Reading Mode. By using gestures to navigate the user interface itself, Javelin was able to hide away most of the tabs and buttons you'd still see in most apps. The browser, or rather its creator, even offered a proxy service, for a fee of course. But last month, Javelin unveiled its biggest feature yet called Stack.


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The name might be a bit like a new tabbed browsing system, and in a way it is. But Javelin Stack is definitely more than that. Like Link Bubble, when you click on a link inside any app, Javelin will load that web page in the background so that you can keep on using the app. A floating bubble will indicate the progress and notify you if your page is loaded and ready. Tapping on the bubble will bring up the links you've just loaded, presented in a tickler visual style. Here you can flip through those pages, dismiss some of them, and load the rest to the fullscreen Javelin browser. Of course, you can also opt to hide the pages again inside the bubble and add more to the stack until you're ready to deal with them.


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With this Stack feature, Javelin claims you can have less taps and less app switching when opening links, but you also have two apps running concurrently, which could be a bit of a drain on the battery and CPU clock cycles. But that would also be the case if you were simply jumping back and forth between the app and another browser, only that would be more cumbersome. That said, it might be a price that some users will be willing to pay just to get this type of power multitasking under their fingertips.


Download: Javelin Browser on Google Play Store

SOURCE: Javelin Browser



Nike launches Fuelband App on Android

Despite the fact that sports giant Nike seemed cozier with Apple and its iOS devices, they released this week an Android version of the app for their smart band. The Nike+ FuelBand app lets users of the FuelBand SE connect their gear with their mobile phone of choice in order to monitor their progress with their health and fitness goals.



Instead of having that gym instructor shouting at you that you’re not doing your exercises right, you now have an app to tell you that your everyday lifestyle just isn’t cutting it if you want to lose that weight or simply just be healthier. Using Bluetooth technology, you can now sync all your lifestyle and health choices and turn the activities in what they call the NikeFuel.


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After you’ve created your fitness program through the NikeFuel Daily Goal, the app can create sessions for you, to track some of your activities like walking from your house to your office or a straight workout session. You can now plot out how many sessions are you from reaching that target and set up memos and reminders to help yourself stay focused on this wellness project. There’s also a social component as well as you can compete with other FuelBand users and your own friends, through the Nike+Friends component .


This new app comes as a surprise as Nike had virtually written off creating apps for Android mobile devices. But it seems like they are once again looking at a larger market, aside from iOS devise users, to get on board with not just their Fuelband wearable gadget but their lifestyle change as well. The app will work on Android gadgets running on 4.3 versions in the US, UK, Canadaian, German and Japanese market.


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Download Fuelband at the Google Play Store


SOURCE: Nike



OnePlus raffles off invites to purchase the One

The marketing team behind new tech company OnePlus really know how to drum up attention for a product that is not even officially out in the market yet. This week, they are digitally raffling off not the product itself, but 2,500 invites to purchase the One ahead of everyone else. But there will also be that one lucky winner who will get to take home probably the most anticipated mobile phone in a long time.



Called “The Storm of Invites”, the mechanics are simple and straightforward. They’re giving away 2,500 invites to purchase the 64 GB Sandstone Black model of the OnePlus One and all you have to do is perform simple digital tasks: liking their official page on Facebook, tweeting about the raffle, following them on their Instagram account and writing a message at their message forums. You have until June 24 to do all these tasks and get as many as 5 entries each person by doing all the items on the list. The winners will then be chosen randomly through Rafflecopter.


For those who hate joining contests, there is still a chance for you to get an invite to purchase the One. If you know of anyone who has already pre-ordered the phone, you can score some invites off of them. Or you can also ask those who have signed up from newsletters, as they occasionally send out these invites through their email.


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What is so interesting about this phone anyway? Oh, only that it is the first non-Google phone that had the audacity to challenge the more established mobile phone makers in terms of hardware and pricing. It has high-end specifications but the phone is pegged at somewhere below $400. It also boasts of a community-developed Android flavour, the CyanogenMod, that did not come from any of the big manufacturers.


SOURCE: OnePlus



Paranoid Android 4.4 RC2 squashes some ugly bugs

If an RC1, for Release Candidate, shocked you, then a Paranoid Android RC2 just a week later might make you faint. Although there isn't much new stuff included in this second release, the PA dev team has devoted a lot of work in squashing out some uglies and smoothening rough edges, hopefully with a final release in sight very soon now.



According to Paranoid Andorid, RC1 shipped with some rather nasty bugs, particularly around the Chrome web browser and some other apps that would inexplicably force close. Those have now been addressed. The release also includes some improvements, particularly in PA's very own Peek notification feature, bringing in the improved sensor handling that we saw in the Peek 2.0 standalone app over the weekend.


Another kind of ugly that RC2 is chasing away is related to how the whole system will look. As promised, PA is bringing in upstream, which refers to the original source, changes and fixes for CyanogenMod's Theme Engine. In addition to that, the developers have ensured that theming is applied on system components that have escaped their scrutiny last time. This new Theme Engine has also arrived on Google Play Store as the Cyanogen Theme Showcase app.


Paranoid Android 4.4 is shaping up to be quite an interesting custom ROM. With new features like Peek and Hover and a closer affinity to vanilla AOSP, the ROM will definitely be able to stand tall and proud and noticeable beside a more ubiquitous ROM like CyanogenMod.


SOURCE: +Paranoid Android



Facebook Slingshot requires you to share before viewing

If there were any doubt that Facebook will be taking on Snapchat, the public launch and availability of its new Slingshot app and platform should banish all that. But rather than just copy it feature by feature, Facebook is putting in a rather curious twist to the ephemeral messaging trend by focusing on a more social and reciprocal aspect.



The basic premise is the same. You can share, called "slinging" in Slingshot parlance, photos or videos with others and, once it has been viewed, or alternatively, ignored, the message will self-destruct. However, unlike Snapchat, the recipient, or recipients, won't simply be able to view what you shared. They will have to first sling something back at you before they're able to see what you slung. Only then will they be able to react to your sling or sling the photo away.


But wait, there's more! And by "more", we mean more recipients. Facebook isn't limiting Slingshot to 1:1 sharing. Instead, you can share those moments with as many friends as you want. Of course, they all have to first share something back, individually of course, before they can see what you just sent. It's the same process really, but it does take out the tedious work of having to reshare your selfie again and again for each recipient.




Admittedly, Slingshot is an interesting and somewhat refreshing take on the Snapchat phenomenon. It does encourage a more active and more social, and therefore more personal, interaction, though perhaps the ulterior motive for Facebook is to drive as much traffic to their networks as possible. There are, however, two questions that could possibly linger in your mind once you've settled down from excitement. First is whether this system will be feasible in the long run. These days, people, especially the younger generation, share things like they share the air they breathe. Slingshot does encourage more thoughtful and intentful sharing, but it also requires a bit more work, at least for the recipient. But perhaps more importantly for those who have been keeping an eye on Snapchat, the question of security and privacy comes to mind. The dust storm from the WhatsApp acquisition proved how Facebook isn't exactly seen in a trustworthy light, and parallels between the two services will undoubtedly be drawn.


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Either way, if you've been taken by this new take on photo and video sharing, Slingshot is now available on Google Play Store for free. Availability is, however, limited only to the US for now and Facebook isn't giving a clue when or if it will have a wider rollout soon.


Download: Slingshot on Google Play Store

SOURCE: Slingshot



Sony releases Live on Youtube app for Xperia Z2

Sony Mobile has created a fresh new app to complement the camera features of its flagship phone for this year, the Xperia Z2, and it is called “Live on Youtube”. Pretty straightforward with the title, you might have already guessed that this is an app that allows you to webcast straight from your phone to all of the internet via the ubiquitous video platform. No prizes for guessing right, sadly.



For this app to work seamlessly, you would first need to have an Xperia Z2, as this is the only phone that the app works on at this point. Whether Sony will open this up to other phones in its wide product list is up to speculation at this point. You will also need to have a working Youtube account, for obvious purposes.


What the app does is take the video feed from the Xperia Z2’s fantastic 20.7 MP camera – which is able to shoot wonderful videos in full HD or even 4K – and broadcasts it live on your Youtube account. You can then share the feed’s link on your social networks so that somebody would be able to see you do those triple somersaults on the trampoline or have your family witness your proposal to your girlfriend even if they are miles away.


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Lest we forget, users will also need to turn on the live feature setting on their Youtube account (do that here now) for the whole thing to work. A couple of caveats – the app cannot be used in countries and places where Youtube is not available (again, obviously). As it happens, there also a restriction of the app in Germany. But apart from those, Xperia Z2 users can download the app from the Google Play Store and start broadcasting live.


VIA: Xperia Blog