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LG’s Quick Circle apps uses G3 without opening phone case

LG’s Quick Circle case, which works exclusively with their flagship G3, is probably one of the most unique phone cases in the market as it is, well, obviously, round. There is now an app package to bring even more functionality to your G3 smartphone without even opening your case. The Quick Circle Apps lets you control your notifications and several functionalities, access your music, and many more, all from the “safety” of your Quick Circle case.



Your usual notifications on your smartphone can now be mirrored onto your Quick Circle case with Quick Notifications. However, viewing them is all that you can do for now as it doesn’t have the capability of performing any action,like dismissing them. Quick Music lets you use any of your music-listening apps so you can control them from that round face you see on the case. Quick Calendar lets you take a glance into your next few days’ schedule or events in the circle.


Some of the other apps included in the package lets you use several basic functionalities of a phone. Quick Torch is for lighting the way when there is no other light source. Quick Stopwatch and Quick Calculator are basically letting you use those two features quickly. Quick Toggles allows you to adjust your phone’s brightness and turn on or off the WiFi and mobile data.


All of these apps are open source and can be tweaked. This is part of LG’s promise that developers are encouraged to create apps and functions specific for users who own an LG G3 and a Quick Circle case. The Quick Circle Apps can be downloaded for free through the Google Play Store.


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XDA Xposed Tuesday: Kids Mode for Your Phone – XDA Developer TV

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The greatest thing about technology is its ability to teach and promote personal growth. No one knows this to be truer than the technology enthusiasts who have procreated and have a little mini-them running around. However, sometimes this little spawn gets ahold of your phone, whether intentionally or unintentionally, and they sometimes make changes they should.


In this episode of XDA Xposed Tuesday, XDA Developer TV Producer TK reviews an Xposed Module that lets you create a kids mode on your phone to protect your device. XDA Senior Member WasseemB created the Kids Mode module. TK shows off the modules and gives his thoughts, so check out this Xposed Tuesday video.




Be sure to check out other great XDA Developer TV Videos



The post XDA Xposed Tuesday: Kids Mode for Your Phone – XDA Developer TV appeared first on xda-developers.


T-Mobile HTC One M8 gets 4.4.3 update, Verizon soon

This update has been floating around for a while now, with Verizon actually hinting that their update to Android 4.4.3 might come out today. As it happens, it looks like T-Mobile HTC One M8 users will be the first to get the update, as Verizon says it needs to “re-spin” the update and might delay the rollout.



For T-Mo users, the update may not have shown up on your notifications yet, but as per GSM Arena, a certified T-Mo HTC One M8 user has let them know (with pictures) that the update is indeed rolling out which includes – among other new stuff – Android 4.4.3. There are major firmware updates that should improve network performance (Wi-Fi/Bluetooth/Mobile Network), and new versions of the Camera, Gallery, Settings and HTC Sync manager apps. Lastly, there are also updates to the BoomSound experience, Extreme Power Saving Mode, Motion Launch and Quick Setting. All in all a tasty update for T-Mo HTC One users.


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For Verizon users, it seems that mid-September is the latest the update will roll out. According to HTC Americas President Jason Mackenzie and HTC VP for the HTC One M8 Mo Versi, they had to recall the impending update – which should have rolled out today – because of some issues that need to be tweaked. No information was given as to what issues these were, but it unfortunately pushes the update out of August and into September at the earliest.


There is confirmation for Verizon users though, that the update will finally make available the Extreme Power Saving Mode that turns off a number of battery hungry features and allows your phone to last for more hours even on critical power levels. Worth noting that AT&T and T-Mobile units of the HTC One M8 got this feature in May this year.


VIA: Droid Life, TMOnews

SOURCE: @JasonMacHTC / @moversi



Blur Launcher gives devs a Google Now Launcher playground

Google Now Launcher (or Google Experience Launcher, if you prefer the older name) is seemingly becoming the new fad for homescreen launchers. After CyanogenMod's own spin on the launcher with its CM Home experiment, Klinker Apps, makers of EvolveSMS and Talon, are now making available a new launcher called Blur that expands Google's launcher to make room for third-party developers to join the party.



What makes the GNL/GEL special? In the context of Google Now, it makes Google's context-based smart assistant easily accessible with a swipe gesture from the homescreen, dedicating the leftmost page to Google Now. Developers have taken inspiration from that concept and put their own twist by displacing Google Now, or at least making it optional, and leaving that space open for third party apps and widgets, or cards in Google Now parlance. In a nutshell, this is what Blur Launcher does but it also goes the extra mile by providing an API for other developers to hook into, making the possibilities potentially endless.


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Coming from Google Now Launcher, which itself is a modification of the AOSP Launcher, every feature is hidden behind the settings option, revealed with a tap and hold gesture on the homescreen. From there, you can choose which app will be embedded in that special Page. One of the limitations of GNL, which CM Home seems to have chosen to inherit, is that there is room for only one such special page. Blur, on the other hand, gives you up to 5 pages if you want. To get the ball rolling, Klinker provides a page for EvolveSMS and Talon for Twitter, the latter requires a separate add-on to be installed. But there is sort of a way around this "one app" limitation. Blur offers an Info Page, which is a Google Now-like implementation, with a Google Search bar on top and space for cards. Unlike Google Now, however, those cards aren't dynamic and context-based and you will have to choose which cards you want to appear there. You can also move rearrange them as you please. At the moment though, it seems that only the Weather card is working.


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But beyond this fancy Page implementation, Blur also offers features that can't be found in GNL or AOSP Launcher that puts it on par with older and more featured Android homescreen replacements. You can, for example, choose the size of both the homescreen and the all apps grid. You can even choose the number of apps allowed on the dock, up to 9 max (the All Apps icon is counted as one). Scrolling effects, icon packs, and gestures are all accounted for. There is even an option for hidden apps and for locking the homescreen icons in place. One note to be aware of, unread badges are not built-in, meaning you won't be able to see the number of unread messages or emails on app icons unless you install and enable and experimental add-on, which requires Android 4.3 or higher. There is even "OK, Google" hotword detection, noted to work only for Android KitKat and later version.


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Blur Launcher is definitely an interesting take on an Android Launcher that offers both the simplicity of GNL/AOSP Launcher with the power of third-party pages and cards. Right now, however, the extremely limited choices of those pages and cards make Blur a little less useful. But with an open API, the launcher has the potential to grow exponentially. All it needs now is for app developers to answer its call.




Download: Blur, Blur - Unread, Talon (Blur) on Google Play Store

SOURCE: +Luke Klinker (1), (2)



Sharp unveils “edge-to-edge display” of Aquos Crystal

When Sharp announced that their upcoming Aquos Crystal phone would have “edge-to-edge display”, people’s expectations of what it would look like were heightened. As they have now unveiled the actual phones, it would seem to have met those expectations, as the front panel of the smartphone has super-thin bezels, giving justice to the original description.



The Aquos Crystal is a 5-inch, 1280x720 pixel full HD phone with that will be running on Android 4.4 KitKat. But what has really caught the attention of people is the almost bezel-less front display of the smartphone. In the photos and videos from Buzzup in Japan, the phone is being shown off in all its edge to edge display glory.The previously released Droid Razr M from Motorola was the closest that we came to that kind of display, but compared to this one from Sharp, the borders now seem too big.


But aside from the beautiful display, the Aquos Crystal also has some relatively good specs to offer. It will run on a dual-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 1.2HGz processor with 1.5GB RAM and 8GB of internal memory. It will have an 8 megapixel main camera and a 1.2MP one for the front-facing camera. It will come out in white, black, pink and blue colors. There is a more powerful version of the Aquos Crystal called the Aquos Crystal X, with a 1920x1080 display running on Snapdragon 801 and having 2GB RAM and 16GB of internal memory. However this version will only be released for now in Japan and will have red, white and black colors.


Softbank will be releasing the Aquos Crystal in the US by the end of this month while the Crystal X will come out in Japan by end of this year. There is still no announced standard retail price for the smartphone, but here’s hoping we don’t have to break a bank to own this one.






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VIA: SlashGear

SOURCE: SoftBank (1, 2)



Flappy Bird creator to come out with new game: Swing Copters

Looks like the guys at Touch Arcade got a first look at Flappy Bird creator Dong Nguyen’s new game called “Swing Copters”. If you feel a bit slighted that some people got to try the new game ahead of you, don’t worry – from the looks of it, those guys will not go far, as the game is heck difficult.



Swing Copters follows in Nguyen’s patented game style – which is cruel and unrewarding, not to mention being frustratingly difficult. These elements are what made that darned bird game so addictive in the first place, and we see the same touches of that in Swing Copters.


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The idea is that your dude – complete with spinning propeller on the head – gets airborne and is wildly flying in one direction, where your tapping coaxes him to the opposite side to balance out the flight. That’s difficult enough, but now you have to steer him through swinging gates. The more gates you pass, the more points. But don’t get your hopes up – as with Flappy Bird, one small touch on an obstacle and it all ends in misery.




The game is not out yet, so it is relegated to the “watch this space” category for now. But we fear for all of you casual gamers out there, Dong Nguyen is out for your happiness. In any case that you would want to tip the man for this game, the one “in-app” purchase is to get rid of the ads – unobtrusive enough that you don’t really have to – but just as a pat on the back for the game developer.


VIA: Touch Arcade



Sony Xperia Z3 Tablet Compact named in user manual

It looks like Sony has an unexpected compact surprise coming soon. While we have been mostly distracted by rumors of the Xperia Z3 and its Xperia Z3 Compact incarnation expected to arrive this IFA 2014, we certainly didn't see an Xperia Z3 Tablet Compact coming. But this won't be an ordinary Xperia tablet as it is clearly marked to be a smaller than usual one.



The revelation comes via the user manual for a Sony Bluetooth Speaker with Magnetic Charging Pad. That charging pad is compatible with many Xperia devices but would require a special attachment for different devices. Under the BSC10A attachment, supported devices include the Xperia Z Ultra, the Xperia Z2 Tablet, and a certain Xperia Z3 Tablet Compact.


Given the unexpected appearance of this mobile device, the rumor mill is still at a loss as to the size of this "compact" tablet. The current titleholder, the Xperia Z2 Tablet, measures 10.1 inches. Naturally the upcoming one would be smaller, but how much smaller? Sony hasn't unveiled a small tablet in a long time but it has quite a number of gigantic smartphones, with the Xperia Z Ultra being the largest at 6.4 inches. This Xperia Z3 Tablet Compact could very well be a 7-inch device, though an 8.9-inch tablet is not yet out of the question.


As to the specs, that part is even more up in the air. But if we use current trends as a basis, we can expect this to sport a Qualcomm Snapdragon 801, 2 to 3 GB of RAM, and a 1080p screen resolution. We will most likely see the real deal at IFA in Berlin next month, when Sony will be unveiling its new generation of Xperia devices.


VIA: Techtastic