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Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Google dumping Motorola isnt a disaster its a reboot

If you play chess, youll know that it isnt always obvious what your opponents up to from a single move.

What looks like a minor play or even a rookie mistake often turns out to be a significant part of a strategy that ends with them shouting "checkmate!" and you throwing the board in their stupid gloating face.


Or maybe thats just my house - but anyway, I think Googles offloading of Motorola Mobility is something similar.

On its own, the sell-off looks bad: Googles ditched most of Moto - its keeping the research and patents - for a fraction of what it paid. As Ian Fogg of IHS reports, "Lenovos $2.91bn barely covers the cash acquired as part of Motorola Mobility." The purchase price of $12.4bn wasnt all Google spent either: it "supported the loss-making Motorola business for over two years."

Not the best investment of all time, then. But you need to factor in two other news announcements. Earlier this week we saw Google and Samsung form a patent alliance to fight iOS, and just yesterday it emerged that Samsung is going to make its Android interfaces considerably less Samsung-y.

In that light, Motorola is the pawn that Googles sacrificing to save a much more important piece: all of Android.

Different goals, common purpose


Google and Samsung may have different goals - Google wants to ensure that its services dont get kicked off mobile, and Samsung wants to sell hardware - but they have a common purpose in pushing Android.

Despite this common purpose, from time to time they appear to be frenemies. When Google bought Motorola it instantly became a rival to Samsung as well as a partner, and when Samsung started messing with the Android UI, it could be said to have diluted the Android experience and brand.

It isnt hard to imagine Google telling Samsung something like, "Well get out of the phone business if you stop messing around with our OS and share some of your patents."

Theres another angle here too, and thats Lenovo. Assuming regulators dont block the sale, which is unlikely, Lenovos just boosted its smartphone business by acquiring a brand that still has a lot of weight in the US market.

As Larry Page said, "Lenovo has the expertise and track record to scale Motorola Mobility into a major player within the Android ecosystem".

When you take all of these things together, its hard to see selling Motorola as a disaster.

Google retains the R&D and the patents, and gets shot of the loss-making hardware division; potential dilution of Android has been halted; Samsungs been brought closer to the mothership; and in Lenovos hands Motorola could become a serious US rival to Samsung - which would further dilute Samsungs power and makes it much less likely that Samsung could hold Google to ransom in the future.

As a result, Android is stronger and more focused than ever before.

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Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Fiz Brewery Management Game v1 0 1 Apk Android

Fiz - Brewery Management Game v1.0.1

Fiz - Brewery Management Game full version apk file download Below:
v1.0.1: HERE

Google Play

From humble garage beginnings, grow your brewery into a world-renowned symbol of excellence by crafting the best beer in the land. Research marketplaces and festivals to learn what your public wants, then brew it using realistic ingredients! Manage your profits to hire new employees, upgrade equipment, and discover new recipes.

Running a world-class brewery isnt all pints and parties, though. Along the way youll experience a story fraught with rivalry, mystery, and desperately thirsty people. Will your beer have what it takes to make a difference in their lives?

SCREENSHOT

If youve ever dreamed of owning a brewery, this is your chance!
Fiz - Brewery Management Game v1.0.1
Size: 9.1 Mb | Android: 2.2 and up
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Monday, April 28, 2014

Happy Street Apk Unlimited Everything Mod Hack

Happy Street APK Mod Unlimited Everything


You will discover a living world full of funny and customizable characters.
Explore a variety of places, such as the peaceful forest where you can fish, sculpt, craft and cook. Let your imagination run wild and develop a village that is truly unique to you, including a train, a giant museum, a hotel to invite your friends, and much, much more.
Experience new technologies such as planes, jet packs, robots and even UFOs!

Mod Gold | Diamons | Items Unlimited apk download Below:
v2.1.201: HERE

Google Play

In Happy Street you can build a uniquely charming village, limited only by your imagination.
Happy Street (Unlimited Everything) Mod 
Size: 45 Mb | Android: 2.2 and up
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Sunday, April 27, 2014

DOOM 3 1 0 1 RUS ENG Apk Data Full Download

DOOM 3 (1.0.1) [RUS / ENG] Android Apk + Data Files
DOWNLOAD FULL VERSION APK + DATA FILES BELOW:

Download from Userfiles: HERE
To download from userfiles you must register for Userfiles: Its free.

In Russia, localized and published by 1C. The game takes place in 2145 in the Research Center of the United Aerospace Corporation (UAC), located on the planet Mars, which is a remake of the original game Doom, but with new graphics and game engine.

Installation:
Folder diii4a throw in root of the SD card, then install the APK their two 1.D1114A.apk with on effects (just working on Tegra 3) 2.D1114A D3 with OFF-icon.apk effects (on the Tegra 2 does not work)

Note: Game didnt work for me: So you download on your oun risk: If it works for you then please comment it.

Tags: doom 3 apk, doom 3 apk + data, doom 3 android download, doom 3 apk download, doom3 apk data, doom 3 android game


Doom 3 - the sci-fi first-person shooter genre survival horror, developed by id Software and published by Activision in 2004.
DOOM 3 (1.0.1) [RUS / ENG]
Size: 1.5 Gb | Android: 2.2 and up
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Saturday, April 26, 2014

BlackBerry 10 2 1 update to be rolled out January 28

The BlackBerry 10.2.1 OS update has been tipped to start rolling out on January 28, according to multiple sources.


BlackBerry 10 was first announced around a year ago with devices like the BlackBerry Q10, which means it’s about time for the Canadian manufacturer to release a meatier update for its BB10 devices.

Although there’s been no official word from BlackBerry yet on the update’s release date, there is mounting evidence to suggest it is imminent.

For starters, there are BlackBerry developer events scheduled for the end of January to apparently show off BlackBerry 10.2.1, while elsewhere carriers report they’ve heard of a January release for the update.

A recently leaked OS 10.2.1.1925 beta has been updated with new files and been given a new date of January 8. The developer version of 10.2.1 OS is also available for download now.

According to multiple sources speaking to Crackberry, the release date will be January 28 with the update available in regions like EMEA and APAC. However, others claim it’ll be a global roll out.

We’re not sure as yet what features will be offered by the new OS update, but there are rumours of a pinch gesture in the Hub, custom quick settings, a new call screen, Device Monitor and picture passwords.

Originally, there was talk of the ability to run Android APK files simply by directly downloading them onto a BB10 device running 10.2.1, but BlackBerry issued an official statement saying that wouldn’t be a possibility:

“We can confirm there is no planned support for Google Play on BlackBerry,” read the statement. “BlackBerry World remains the primary source for trusted and curated BlackBerry applications and we continue to support open standards and open source tools so BlackBerry developers can continue to create apps on any of the development platforms we support.”
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Friday, April 25, 2014

iPad mini and Samsung Galaxy S4 deemed most fragile gadgets

The iPad mini and the Samsung Galaxy S4 have been deemed the most fragile gadgets in an experiment by an insurance company.



















A study involving drop tests onto concrete and water dunks has discovered the top ten most fragile gadgets currently available to buy.

The research carried out by insurance firm SquareTrade Europe included looking at the design and construction of the devices, as well as their weight, grip and water resistance.

“We are all investing in more and more technology, so when we do we want to make sure that we are going to get our money’s worth”, said Kevin Gillan, MD of SquareTrade Europe. “By putting devices through tests that replicate real life situations, we want to help people make smart choices when it comes to choosing gadgets and ensure they are covered against accidental damage.”

All the test results and phone specs were put together to form SquareTrade’s “breakability score”, where higher numbers indicated a more fragile device.

Unfortunately for Apple, four iOS products made it into the top ten. The iPad mini and Samsung Galaxy S4 were shown to be the most breakable out of the lot though.

Google and Samsung make up the rest of the list outside Apple products, with three products each in the top ten.

Samsung actually did the worst as the S4 took second place and the Samsung Galaxy S3 was in fourth place.

At least Google and Apple learnt some lessons with design generations, as the iPad Air was deemed less fragile that the iPad mini, iPhone 5C more fragile than the iPhone 5S and the Google Nexus 7 2 less breakable than its predecessor.

The full list is as follows:

1.    iPad mini – 7.5
2.    Samsung Galaxy S4 – 7
3.    iPad Air – 6.5
4.    Samsung Galaxy S3 – 6.5
5.    iPhone 5C – 6
6.    Nexus 7.1 – 6
7.    Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 – 5.5
8.    iPhone 5S – 5
9.    Nexus 7 2 – 5
10.    Moto X – 4.5

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Thursday, April 24, 2014

50 best Android games 2014

While the free-to-play market has taken a bit of a beating of late due to gamers falling out of love with the use of in-app payments, the world of mobile gaming is still an exciting one.

50 best Android games 2014

Whether you want games that will last the length of a commute, or want to be lost in a port of GTA where you spend hours mowing down pedestrians and making money out of murder, there is a game on here for you.

The list is a mixture of free and paid for games, and also that one in between - some in-app payments arent really that bad. Honest! If by the end you think we have missed something special off of the list, let us know and we will see if it is worthy of inclusion further down the line.

1. Dots 


Proving the notion that simpler is better on mobile, Dots is stupidly, almost patronisingly simple, with players just drawing lines between coloured dots. Link them up and, as coloured things tend to do in games, they disappear, So more fall in. And it carries on like this, getting more and more compulsive as you chase bigger and better dot combos.

2. The Simpsons Tapped Out


EAs game based on the inhabitants of Springfield is surprising in a few ways. Its free, which is quite the thing, plus, although what many would deride as a freemium game, its more than possible to keep it going in the background, pottering away, slowly unlocking all of its content for free. Free-to-play done right, for once.

3. Angry Birds Space 


Developer Rovio has done quite a lot of aggressive whoring of the Angry Birds franchise, but this space-based fork of the simplistic physics game series is really worth a try. For one, it introduces some new play concepts, with the planet-based levels requiring different tactics, plus the puzzles generally need a bit more of a thoughtful approach than the chuck-it-and-see of the originals.

4. Badland


Has a bit of an indie vibe about it this one, with Badland offering a weird, dark and gloomy world, in which you fly about in control of a… blob thing. Your blob gets bigger and smaller, splits into loads of mini clones, and generally baffles you about what might lie around the next corner. We like a bit of a surprise, and this is full of them.

5. Stick Cricket 


Stick Cricket is a fantastically simple little game that reduces cricket to its core values - you just smash every ball as hard as you can. Theres no worrying about field positioning, just a bat and a ball coming at you very quickly. Initially it seems impossible to do anything other than make a complete mess of things and having your little man smashed upside-down, but it soon clicks.

6. Cestos


Cestos is sort of a futuristic recreation of curling, where players chuck marbles at each other to try and smash everyone elses balls/gems down the drain and out of the zone. The best part is this all happens online against real humans, so as long as theres a few other bored people out there at the same time youll have a real, devious, cheating, quitting person to play against. Great.

7. PewPew


The developer calls this a "multidirectional shoot them up" presumably because describing it as a "Geometry Wars clone" might have got him in a bit of legal trouble. Regardless of its origin, its a superb shooter with some bizarre game modes and controls that work exceptionally well on touch devices.

8. Super Bit dash


One of the best examples of the new wave of retro-inspired platformers, Super Bit Dash is a scrolling platformer where you dont control the scroll -- but you do have a say in the jumping. Its a case of learning the levels and playing them again and again and again, until you have the required muscle memory to smash through without thinking about it. 

9. Plague Inc 


A really enjoyable and tough strategy game, in which you play some sort of evil god intent on crushing all of mankind. You do this by developing viruses, which spread through the air, water or human contact, gradually wiping out countries, continents and, if the winds literally blowing in the right direction, everyone.

10. Whale Trail Frenzy


No one dies of disease in Whale Trail. Its a sweet flying sim, which sees you float about in the clouds having a lovely time, collecting things, boosting and generally being quite happy about it. The cheery vibe is broken a bit when adverts and in-app purchase requests pop up, but its happy enough before the money men turn up.

11. Pitfall!


We had low expectations of Activisions odd decision to rework its ancient platform game as an endless runner, but it turned out surprisingly nice. Key to its winning nature comes from the variety of the levels, which sees the adventuring hero endlessly minecarting, endlessly motorbiking and endlessly whipping, in a thoroughly enjoyable little game.

12. Bad Piggies


Angry Birds maker Rovio proves its not a one-trick bird-pony with this, a bizarre and quirky physics game. You have a toolbox at your disposal, used to build a flying and/or driving machine, which then has to trundle its way through a level. Its silly, but at least attempts to shove out some new ideas.

13. Pocket Planes 


An extremely clever and enjoyable miniature strategy game that has you taking control of a small airline and attempting to ramp up customer numbers. It starts out with a few simple freight runs before you expand the fleet, open up new routes and generally get a bit panicked about how many people are depending on you for their holidays.

14. Radiant Defense


The tower defense genre is heaving on Android, thanks to the poke and press play mechanics being ideally suited to touchscreen play. Radiant Defense is a great example of the simplified strategy concept, presenting its war action in a futuristic neon style that looks awesome on any phone with the grunt to do it justice.

15. Pocket League Story 2


Kariosofts made a big thing for itself by using its management style of game across various scenarios, with this sporting event being one of the best. You take control of a club, then stress about signings, money, tactics and more. Its slightly robbed of some fun via a desire to use in-app purchases to squeeze money out of players, ironically mirroring the state of the game it takes inspiration from.

16. New Star Soccer 


A great football management game that has a bit of a sense of humour about itself. Theres some turn-based play, but its more about bringing together the off-pitch lifestyles of players with the crucial money matters of the football universe. Like Pocket League Story there are some in-app cash demands, so prepare to be badgered for payments after youve progressed some way through.

17. Star Wars: Tiny Death Star


An absolutely gorgeous pixel-art recreation of the Star Wars universe, in which players embrace the dark side and go to work creating Death Stars to please the man in black. A massive challenge, made even more massive should you choose to play it without resorting to taking the shortcut of paying real money for in-game cash.

18. Sonic Dash 


There is some arguing as to whether this is "free" as its rammed with in-app purchases, but theres no dispute as to its quality. Sonics latest mobile game is, appropriately, an endless runner, with the hedgehog jumping left and right to avoid obstacles placed around its familiar green worlds.

19. Cut the Rope: Time Travel 


The weird little physics game is one of Androids most popular franchises, with this update introducing a few new tricks and weapons. Its the same sort of experience as its earlier chapters, though, with players swinging ropes to throw sweeties around its colourful screens. Masses of levels and a mid-to-high fun level.

20. Wingsuit - Proximity Project


A hard game for people who want to emulate BASE jumping nutcases, the aim here is to not die or injure yourself while flying around dangerous environments wearing just a wingsuit. Dont expect to have much fun, though, as the developer warns on the apps listing: "If youre looking for something easy, I suggest Angry Birds." 

21. Beach Buggy Blitz


Offers something approaching big console quality on Android, in a game rammed with pretty worlds, loads of vehicles, power-ups, upgrades and more, plus the graphics engine can adapt to more powerful hardware and throws in more effects if youre using something with a serious number of cores. There is some level of in-app purchasing on offer, but its mild and easily avoidable.

22. Deadly Bullet


Has a plot involving something to do with the future, but its best skipped. The games a top-down shooter, but instead of controlling the nutcase with the gun you get to "be" the bullet, which you control using left and right turns. This slow-mo bullet then winds its way around town, exploding power-ups and the bad future people.

23. Voxel Rush


A very pretty and minimalist racer, where the usual beach/mountain/lava environments have been binned in favour of bold slabs of colour. Its stylish, motion controlled, ready for multiplayer action and integrates Google Play Game support for solo achievements and leaderboards.

24. Nightbird Trigger X


What the developer calls a "point shooting game," Nightbird Trigger X is a one-button pony where your little man has to shoot a point in the screen to progress. But theres stuff in the way. Annoying moving stuff, that means you score less and take longer if you cant find the target with your first bullet. Simple, but free and a little bit original.

25. Toca Kitchen


£1.99 ($2.99, $AU3.68)
If you want your kids to play something free from the looming menace of in-app purchases, give the awesome Toca Boca apps a spin. Toca Kitchens a super little virtual playset, giving kids safe access to knives, blenders and microwaves, with which they prepare meals for a series of fussy in-game characters. Super-cute and a blast for even the youngest kids.

26. Spaceteam 


This is bonkers. Spaceteam uses the Android hardware to the max to build a properly innovative multiplayer-only game, where between two and four players come together to shout exciting space terminology at each other while battling the control panel of an exploding ship. Its very silly, like something that only came out on the Wii in Japan.

27. Toast Time


£0.69 ($2.99, $AU1.28)
If it needs pigeon-holing, Toast Time is best described as a combat platform game. Thing is, youre only a toaster, and your weapon is… toast. So its sort of a toast-based physics simulation as well, with the kickback from the toast knocking the toaster around the screen and requiring constant compensation. Because theres a clock that needs protecting and… its best you play it. Its good.

28. Ridiculous Fishing


£1.99 ($2.99, $AU3.68)
Quite possibly one of the best uses of the mobile phone accelerometer tech theres ever been, this, with motion control sending your fishing line down to the depths of the sea while you avoid fish. Then, on the way up, its how you catch them. Thats when it goes ridiculous, as the fisherman chucks them up in the air -- and you shoot them to bank the money. Silly, but a must play.

29. Super Hexagon 


£1.99 ($2.99, $AU3.68)
Another mobile classic. Super Hexagon has two controls -- rotate left and rotate right. Thats all you need to navigate the endless maze that spins out of the screen, in one of the mobile worlds hardest, coolest, best-sounding and most moreish games. We order you to buy it. You literally have to.

30. ChuChu Rocket!


£0.90 ($0.99, $AU2.00)
A lot of the old console games we remember and occasionally cry about dont translate well to mobile. On-screen buttons kill a lot of the fun of playing precise, skill-based titles, but Segas ChuChu is more about strategy and brainpower than sheer speed, making it one of the finest retro titles on Google Play.

31. Minecraft Pocket Edition 


£4.99 ($6.99, $AU9.25)
The build em up phenomenon works brilliantly well on Android, thanks to the creator of the desktop original taking the time to do it justice. Its a slimmed down interface you see here with on-screen buttons, but the basics are all in and the Survival and Creative modes are ready for play -- as is multiplayer mode over Wi-Fi.

32. Heroes of Loot 


£1.72 ($1.99, $AU3.30)
The entire back catalogue of solo indie creator OrangePixel is worth exploring, but his latest is the best yet. Its a stylish 2D dungeon explorer, with masses of quests, classes and secret areas to unlock. Plus it supports a wide range of Bluetooth controllers, for easier play if youve got a compatible lump of buttoned plastic.

33. Flight Control 


£0.60 ($0.99, $AU1.20)
An exciting new genre all of its own when it appeared, Flight Control created the world of the top-down air traffic control simulator. Literally three million times more exciting than it sounds, its played by swiping 2D aeroplanes into runway landing slots, avoiding collisions and scoring for successful landings. Perfectly suited to touchscreen play. 

34. Pac-Man Championship Edition


£2.60 ($3.99, $AU5.00)
Not just the same old Pac-Man thats been emulated, re-released and cloned for the last 30 years. Pac-Man CE is a fresh reworking of the maze game, with jazzy graphics, scrolling mazes and pumping sounds updating the concept for the kids of today. And the dads of today. Anyone after a really smart puzzle game, in fact. 

35. Game Dev Story 


£1.60 ($2.50, $AU3.00)
The "Story" that started Kairosofts domination of the simplistic business world sim, Game Dev Story sees you take charge of a software house and attempt to create a smash game. The sweet pixel-art characters then battle with the complexities of design and the stresses of arbitrary internet reviews from people who havent even played it (ahem), in the pursuit of a money-making smash.

36. Raiden Legacy 


£4.49 ($4.99, $AU10.00)
Quite possibly the greatest 2D shoot em up of all time, the Android conversion of Radien is every bit as impressive as the original. A choice of control schemes, display and difficulty settings make it a little more manageable on touchscreens, plus, seeing as this is the Legacy edition, you get Raiden, Raiden Fighters, Raiden Fighters 2 and Raiden Fighters Jet.

37. Division Cell 


£1.12 ($1.84, $AU2.15)
This is how we like them. Weird, interesting looking and rock hard, Division Cell is about organising shapes, creating harmony where there was once chaos. Then telling everyone about what you just did on Facebook and Twitter. Having well over 100 fun and innovative levels means you get your moneys worth here.

38. Football Manager Handheld 2014 


£6.99 ($9.99, $AU12.00)
Explodes through the usual Android game price ceiling by charging £6.99, but, in this case, its worth it. The full app offers a superb, stats-heavy mobile take on the classic management series, hardly skimping on any minute detail in the transition to mobile. Manage transfers, the media, match days and more in one of the sporting gamers must-get titles.

39. Canabalt HD 


£1.99 ($2.99, $AU3.68)
The newer, slightly posher version of the original game, the one that pretty much invented the "endless runner" genre that now clogs up the gaming sections of the app stores of the world. You are a man. You run along rooftops to a techno soundtrack. Thats about it, only its much more enjoyable than it sounds.

40. Another World


£1.80 ($1.99, $AU3.49)
The classic 2D puzzle platformer that wowed the simpler folk of the 1990s with the very occasional bit of 3D, has arrived in perfect form on Android. This 20th anniversary edition has the original graphics plus the option of an HD refresh, but whats really about is getting to play one of gamings most loved classics. On your phone. For a couple of quid. Madness.

41. GTA Vice City 


£2.99 ($4.99, $AU5.53)
Seem to remember people thought this was quite good. For the price of a pint (if youre somewhere northern) you can own one of the largest and most highly-rated video games of all time, to pop in and out of on your mobile phone. On-screen controls are never going to suit a game like this, but they are at least fully customisable -- so you can get it how you like it.

42. Terraria 


£3.14 ($4.99, $AU5.70)
Sort of a Minecraft… platform… puzzle em up, Terraria players dig and mine and fight their way through randomly generated worlds. Resources make weapons and houses, weapons and houses mean you stay alive, plus theres Wi-Fi multiplayer support that has it nearing parity with the version sold on desktops.

43. Sonic The Hedgehog 2


£1.99 ($2.99, $AU3.68)
Not the easiest thing to play using on-screen buttons, but the fact this exists at all is a marvel. Its also a glorious conversion, with Sega finally taking the time to do the best Sonic justice. Its been remastered into widescreen and supports a wide range of Bluetooth controllers so, even if you dont yet own one, youll be able to enjoy it fully when you eventually do.

44. Osmos HD 


£1.87 ($2.99, $AU3.45)
A lovely little ambient puzzle thing, in which you play a cell thing and make it your business to absorb others. The residue you fire out makes you smaller, though, so efficient use of your biological systems is a must. Its a chillout experience more than a game, with the surreal concept joined by some equally relaxing ambient music. A charmer.

45. Assassins Creed Pirates 


£1.99 (sale) ($2.99, $AU3.68)
Currently on sale for half the usual price at £1.99, this is no crappy cash-in on a bigger brand. Its a standalone game, offering a real-time strategic game built around attacking and defending ancient warships. Its inspired by the battle sequences from a previous AC game, but the actual missions here are all new. Well worth two or even the usual four pounds.

46. Broken Sword: Directors Cut


£2.99 ($3.99, $AU5.53)
This cult classic from an earlier wave of the big home consoles has been converted beautifully to Android, capturing the slightly odd and amusing adventure perfectly - and with an interface that really works on todays touchscreens. Its an "indie" game from before there were indie games, silly and with some excellent and challenging puzzles.

47. Worms 2: Armageddon


£0.99 (sale) ($0.99, $AU1.99)
Very old and very good, the Worms series led the way when it came to making strategy games fun. The comedy combat action is turn-based, with players alternating at having pop shots at each other with their weaponry. This slower pace means its ideal for online and local multiplayer, as the odd glitch doesnt ruin the experience.

48. World of Goo


£2.99 ($4.99, $AU5.53)
The indie gaming classic has been on Android for some time, winning over a new generation of mobile gamers with its goo-based physics puzzle action. Massive disembodied heads roll down hills and blobs race through pipes, plus the musics excellent and it even supports Googles new leaderboard features for beating friends scores.

49. Carmageddon


£0.69 ($0.99, $AU1.28)
The stupid game about running people over that got on the news when it launched back in the mid 1990s. The news wasnt particularly bothered about it arriving on Android last year, which is a shame as its actually quite a fun thing to mess around with. And the once shocking graphics are laughable by todays standards, giving the slaughter of pedestrians a more tragi-comic edge.

50. Final Fantasy VI


£10.99 ($15.99, $AU19.99)
At time of writing, Square Enixs Android remakes of the Final Fantasy series only go up to Final Fantasy VI, which is probably just as well as we think the world may well explode should FF VII ever appear on Android. But chapter VI of the RPG series is almost as good an experience, offering a vast quest and the usual hours of unrelenting storytelling. 


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Wednesday, April 23, 2014

The Great Martian War Android MOD 1 2 0 Apk Unlimited Money Download

The Great Martian War APK MOD 1.2.0 Unlimited Money
Its 1913, and war is hell—especially when the enemy you must face are terrifying Martian warriors. You are Gus Lafonde, fearless scout and soldier—and you must survive. The future of the planet—along with every human being—depends on you.

Navigate vast battlefields as you evade sneaky land mines, deafening artillery strikes, massive tanks, and towering Martian war machines.

Collect Rations and Victisite (the living metal that powers the alien machines) to unlock powerups.

Google Play

DOWNLOAD FULL VERSION MONEY MOD APK FILES BELOW:

v1.2.0 Download from Zippyshare: HERE
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The Martians have invaded! Can you survive long enough to save Earth from extinction?
The Great Martian War  1.2.0 
Size: 37 Mb | Android: 2.2 and up
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Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Googles trying to boot Windows out of Android devices apparently

Google is unhappy about sharing devices with Microsoft, claims a new report, and is trying to dissuade manufacturers from releasing devices that dual boot Windows and Android.

Android and Windows - Dual boot

According to Digitimes (sometimes right, sometimes not), Google is putting "pressure" on Asus to postpone the release of its Transformer Book Duet TD300 hybrid, which comes running both operating systems.

The report goes on to claim that "other PC vendors now also have intentions to stop plans for producing products featuring dual operating system features"

Sorry, theres just no room


As such a big player in the market, it wouldnt be a surprising move from Google – dual-booting with Windows is only really going to benefit Microsoft.

As for how successful Google might be at ousting its rival from the bed, its tough to tell. Intel and Microsoft could reap a lot of rewards from jumping in with Android, so Mountain View better hope it has enough charm to sway manufacturers.

That is, if any of this is true at all. Weve contacted Asus for comment on the availability of the TD300 and will update when we hear more.

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Monday, April 21, 2014

Rayman Fiesta Run Apk v1 1 0 Full Version

Rayman Fiesta Run Apk v1.1.0 Full Version
If you enjoyed Rayman Jungle Run, you will love Rayman Fiesta Run and its new wacky Fiesta world! Lunge for cocktail umbrellas, leap on limes and punch those piñatas…the sky’s the limit!
 More than 75 levels welcome you for the Fiesta!
Bounce on sausages and make your way through 4 new festive worlds
Beat all 3 new epic bosses to reach the dreaded Land of the Livid Dead Island!
Collect Lums to get awesome rewards and power-ups

Instructions:
Install apk.
Extract and copy com.ubisoft.rayman.fiestarun map into /sdcard/Android/obb/ COPY HERE
It should look like this /sdcard/Android/obb/com.ubisoft.rayman.fiestarun
Launch the game.

Google Play

v1.1.0 Download from UploadRocket: HERE
v1.1.0 Download from Zippyshare: HERE
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Join legendary platforming hero Rayman for a new adventure on your favorite mobile device!
Rayman Fiesta Run Apk v1.1.0
Size: 116 Mb | Android: 2.3.3 and up
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Sunday, April 20, 2014

Google Nexus 5 review

Key Features: Quad-core 2.27GHz Snapdragon 800 CPU; 2GB RAM; 16/32GB storage; 5-inch 1080p IPS screen; Android 4.4; 8-megapixel camera with flash and OIS
Manufacturer: Google


What is the Google Nexus 5?


The Google Nexus 5 is the one new Google-branded phone for 2013. It takes over from the Google Nexus 4. And like that phone, it guns for its big-name Android rivals with a super-aggressive price. Offerring excellent performance, a smart design and great value, the Nexus 5 is undoubtedly one of the best phones of the year. Read on to find out why.

Google Nexus 5 – Design


The Google Nexus 5 is made by LG. You probably wouldnt know it unless you spot the little LG logo on the back, though. It has none of the quirky design elements of the LG G2.

This is a deeply pragmatic phone in many respects, in that Google was clearly out to make a mobile that looks and feels great, without any of the flashy, budget-busting bits of a £600 phone like the iPhone 5S. The Google Nexus 5 is arguably much more conservative, design-wise, than the Nexus 4 it replaces.

The Nexus 5 is made of soft touch matt black plastic. It doesnt sound as impressive as the aluminium of the HTC One, but the response from the TrustedReviews team was unanimous – it feels great.

Its back is lightly curved, adding to the hand-friendliness of the silky smooth finish. The Nexus 5 looks good, too. Every part of the phone bar the LED flash is black (a white version is also available), and the lack of any recognisable flashy extras beyond the oversized camera lens housing make it quite a pure design.

It comes across as a much more confident phone than the Nexus 4, with its jazz hands spangly finish and glass rear.

The one issue of such a simple-looking phone is that front-on, its not that easy to casually tell which way around it is. All navigation keys are part of the screen, so the only indicators are the deeply low-key earpiece speaker and front camera. Its a bit of a phone ninja.

The lack of any flashiness is clear in its construction, too. Although the Nexus 5 does not have a removable back – theres no battery access and no hidden memory card slot – this is not a unibody phone. The back plate and the plastic sides of the phone are two different bits, and theres a clear seam between them.

We imagine this makes the phone easier to construct, and easier to fix. But to pedantic eyes, its something that shows this phone hasnt been constructed on a limitless budget.

However, handling-wise its one the nicest phones in its class – beaten only by the slightly smaller HTC One. LG has put a lot of effort into making the Nexus 5 as narrow as possible, making it less of a handful, and its slim too.

The Nexus 5 is 69mm wide and 8.6mm thick. Thats 0.5mm narrower, and 0.7mm thicker than, the Samsung Galaxy S4. Being a budget-conscious phone hasnt resulted in a remotely chunky body, and in-use it leaves the impression of being almost all screen thanks to its super-slim screen bezel. LG has done a fantastic job as manufacturing partner here.

Like any 5-inch phone, though, reaching from one end of the screen to the other with a thumb is a bit of a stretch. If you have small hands, we recommend getting your hands on a phone this large before buying any mobile this size.

In common with many phones with non-removable rear panels, the Google Nexus 5 uses a pop-out SIM tray. It takes microSIM cards – now the most commonly used type in high-end phones.

One other hardware feature worth a nod is the well-executed notification LED. Its a multi-colour LED whose light is diffracted slightly to give it a glow effect, and it sits dead centre below the screen. Its low-key style fits in perfectly with the phones self-assured low-key design. Like so many elements of this phone, its simple, and its good.

This isnt a phone that panders to all the demands of the hardcore tech geek brigade, though. Theres no dedicated video output (extremely rare these days) and no way to expand upon the 16GB or 32GB of internal memory. We dont think these are significant downsides unless youre looking for a video jukebox phone, though.

Google Nexus 5 – Screen


As the phones name suggests, the Google Nexus 5s screen is 5-inches (4.95 inches to be exact), up from the 4.7-inches of the Google Nexus 4. It is one of the most pleasant mobile screens around at present, and almost certainly the best you can get for £300.

Like the Samsung Galaxy S4 and HTC One, the Google Nexus 5 has a Full HD screen of 1,920 x 1,080 pixels. Spread across the phones 5-inches that gets you pixel density of 445 ppi.

Increases in pixel density figures become a case of diminishing returns in most cases once you get above the 326ppi Retina standard Apple popularised with the iPhone 4 back in 2010. But nevertheless, the Nexus 5 display is immaculately sharp. Of course, the main benefit of a screen like this is not really sharpness, but smoothness – the curves of small characters are not remotely jagged, making them much easier on the eyes.

People often think high-res screens are useful for gaming and movie-watching foremost, but they are actually just as important for web browsing.

The Nexus 5 uses an IPS display, the same type seen in the iPhone 5S. Viewing angles are perfect, and theres an immediacy to the display that marks it out as a true top-end screen. Lower-end screens tend to appear a little recessed, featuring more discrete screen layers, reducing contrast and image pop.

What were most glad about, though, is how much better colour reproduction is in the Nexus 5, compared to the Nexus 4. LG has clearly been working on its screen calibration skills since that phone, because colours are better-saturated, and without any of the oversaturated reds that are often apparent in AMOLED-type screens.

Outdoors visibility is solid, too. The same high-end screen architecture that makes images look super-lively indoors makes them avoid becoming too washed out outdoors. Top brightness is good rather than truly remarkable, but in actual use we had no complaints with what the screen is capable of. Its a corker.

Theres just one slight complaint. the Nexus 5s screen doesnt have insanely fast refresh rates. Moving quickly up and down Android 4.4s menus does leave a tiny trail. The effect is very minor, though.

Google Nexus 5 – Android 4.4 KitKat Software


The Google Nexus 5 is the first phone to launch with Android 4.4 KitKat. Its also one of just a few devices that will offer the software as Google intended. Almost every other phone these days has custom interface that adds a bunch of features and alters, in a handful of small ways, what the phone feels like to use.

Its a real pity, because in its pure form, Android 4.4 is a very coherent, easy-to-use system. These days it doesnt really have many more potentially-confusing dangling bits than the latest version of the iPhone software, iOS 7.

Like iOS 7,  Android 4.4 KitKat makes the system look slightly more friendly and, at a push, cartoony. Some of the last remnants of visual stuffiness – unnecessary borders and rigid lines that arent really effective visual punctuation – have gone. More menus are hidden until you need them, making Android feel less cluttered than ever.

These are similar changes HTC made in its own Sense 5.0 UI, introduced in the excellent HTC One.

Theres not as much customisation as you get with some other Android phones, though. For example, you cant choose between different screen transitions, or how long these animations take. Is that an unnecessary extra? Probably.

Google has fine-tuned the options it makes available, including only those that are truly worthwhile in the Nexus 5. A good example is font size – You can pick five sizes between small and huge, and it affects fonts throughout the phones UI – in some phones it only affects the menus, not the home screen.

Android 4.4 is a refreshing, pared-back approach to Android. And we think it is the right approach.

The way you interact with Android hasnt changed either, meaning you can add in plenty of the missing customisation with third-party apps if you feel the need.

Google Nexus 5 – Apps and Games


Other than a slightly new look, the Nexus 5s Android 4.4 software also sees Google start to squish together some of its mobile and desktop services/apps. The most obvious of these is Hangouts.

Google Hangouts is a chat interface for Google Plus on a computer, but in the Nexus 5 its also where all your SMS messages end up. Good old fashioned text messages and mobile internet-powered web chats are virtually the same thing in the Nexus 5.

Its Googles way to try and make people use its own services all the more – but its executed simply enough to stop it being confusing, beyond the new name. You can also change the default SMS app in the Settings menu (more are available from Google Play) if you really dont get on with Hangouts.

Most of Googles other core Android apps are likely familiar to you – Maps, Mail, Calendar and Drive are all well-established bits of software that will fit like well-worn shoes if youve used Android in the past.

There are a a few much newer additions, though. Google Keep was introduced in March 2013, and is a simple note-taking tool that stashes all your post-its on your Drive account. It lets you attach audio clips and pictures too, and its interface is beautifully simple. Its designed for the everyday user, not the hardcore note-taking obsessive, but makes a good Evernote-replacer for most people.

Whats more interesting is the inclusion of QuickOffice, a definite stab at Microsoft and its inclusion of Office in Windows Phone. Its an office suite that lets you create and edit text documents, spreadsheets and presentations directly from the Nexus 5 – and save them directly to Google Drive, or the internal memory. Google is offering a direct rival for the mobile versions of Word, Excel and Powerpoint here. And while still a tiny bit fiddly on a phone, they are – like much of Android 4.4 – pretty intuitive.

The Nexus 5s Android 4.4 also tries to push Google Now. Its a service that pre-empts information you might ask for, such as weather where you live, and the routes back home from where you are.

This is the only phone that lets you zoom straight to Google Now just by saying Ok Google from the home screen. However, its not a feature we could get to work, despite having offline recognition installed. Oh well.

New optimisations aside, the Nexus 5 offers all the apps and games scope of any other Android phone. You get full access to the Google Play app store, and both the 16GB and 32GB models give you space for loads content. However, this will soon get eaten up if you install lots of data-heavy 3D games, or fill the phone up with movies. Unlike a Samsung Galaxy S4, you cant increase internal memory here.

Google Nexus 5 – Performance and Benchmarks


General performance of the Nexus 5 is excellent. Navigation is super-quick, with lag-free transitions thanks to both the optimisations of Android 4.4 and the power of the Nexus 5. We did experience a few little glitches in our testing, but these related mostly to third-party apps (unavoidable) and the camera app (likely to be ironed out in sequential updates).

The Google Nexus 5 uses a Snapdragon 800 CPU, on par with the top new Android phones of late 2013, and notably faster than the Galaxy S4.

The Snapdragon 800 used here is a quad-core 2.27GHz processor with 2GB of RAM. Given the £300 asking price of the Nexus 5, thats a cracking spec, matching the Sony Xperia Z1 and LG G2.

We tried a host of high-end 3D action games to see if the Nexus 5 would trip up, but it did not. Real Racing 3, Dead Trigger 2 and Epic Citadel all ran perfectly. If a current game doesnt run well, its because of poor optimisation on the developers part, not a failing of the Nexus 5.

Benchmarks once again prove that the new Nexus offers stellar value for money. With 17,757 in the 3D Mark Unlimited test, 2,715 in Geekbench (907 single-core), 803ms in Sunspider and 801 in the Peacekeeper test, the Nexus 5 offers performance very close to the Xperia Z1 - a phone that costs £200 more.

Its not as powerful as an iPhone 5S, but for the time being you cant get a more powerful Android phone with good game developer support. The latest Intel Atom mobile processors are a good deal faster, but as theyre hardly used in any phones, developers dont tend to optimise for them specifically.

In short, the Nexus 5 rules for gaming.

Google Nexus 5 – Music and Video


As already mentioned, the Nexus 5 is not a perfect music or video jukebox – especially not the 16GB version – because theres just not enough storage potential. Unless you go down the streaming route with a Spotify, Netflix or similar subscription, youre going to be limited to the internal storage. And with a 16GB phone, only 12.5GB is accessible.

Still determined to make your Nexus 5 a media powerhouse? Transferring files is simple, as the internal memory shows up as a drive when connected to a computer.

As with the rest of the Nexus 5, the phone comes with the bog-standard Google media apps only – Play Music and Play Movies.

Both apps try and get you to sign up for, or buy, Googles own content. Theyre not pure media player apps, but the music interface in particular is strong. It looks good, it runs fast.

The Nexus 5 doesnt offer as strong codec support as a Samsung Galaxy S4, though. Youre restricted to the native support offered by Android 4.4 unless you use a good third-party player. Our usual test app, MxPlayer, isnt currently available for Android 4.4 devices (this is likely to be sorted within days/weeks).

Google Nexus 5 – Sound Quality


One element of the Google Nexus 5 that hasnt been given a good deal of attention is the internal speaker. Its a pretty standard mono affair that doesnt get close to matching the HTC One in terms of sound quality, sound dispersal or volume. It is not terrible either, with solid enough output to make the back of the phone vibrate (a not entirely positive side effect). At top volume, the speaker does start to crackle with some content, though.

Its design is also a bit misleading. There are two grilles on the bottom edge of the phone, but like iPhone 5S the sound only comes out of one of them. The, we assume, contains the microphone, either that or its there just for symmetrys sake. Unfortunately, also like the iPhone, this means the sound is easy to block off when playing a game.

Google Nexus 5 – Connectivity


Like almost all top-end phones these days, the Google Nexus 5 offers 4G support. There are two different versions of the phone, designed for different markets, meaning you dont get 100 per cent worldwide coverage, but that should not bother most people.

Other wireless connectivity is pretty advanced, too. You get Wi-Fi that supports the ac standard – which has only recently become common in routers – as well as NFC, Bluetooth 4.0 (aka Bluetooth Smart), Miracast and all the Android standards such as GPS and HSPA 3G mobile internet.

We miss out on some of the usefulness of NFC in the UK, as Google Wallet has not launched here yet, but the Nexus 5 is undeniably fully-featured.

Looking back to hardware connectivity, the microUSB port on the bottom of the Nexus 5 is actually a SlimPort – also seen in the Nexus 4. Its a rival to MHL, and lets you output video from the phone using the right adapter. As usual, you dont get one in the box, but you can find one online for around £20.

Google Nexus 5 – Camera


The Google Nexus 5 has a camera that mostly matches the Nexus 4 in terms of pure specs. It has an 8-megapixel 1/3.2-inch sensor and an f/2.5 lens. When the Nexus 4 camera was nothing to shout about, we were preparing ourselves for disappointment. But the Nexus 5 offers some pretty good results in practice.

Detail capture and exposure

The Nexus 5s most serious image quality issue is exposure metering. It tends to blow out bright areas, something that rival iPhones simply dont do (generally speaking).

Detail capture is roughly on-par with the iPhone 5S, as you would hope given the use of similar-resolution sensors, but the exposure issue leads to much more problematic images in scenes with strong light sources. Theres also significant purple fringing around light sources in these sorts of trickier scenes, to the extent that its visible without significant zooming into shots, when viewed on a computer.

We were left with both under- and overexposed shots during testing, suggesting that whatever imaging brain is powering the Nexus 5 could do with an update or two. Dynamic range in normal photos is pretty poor too.

HDR

However, these exposure issues can mostly be solved using the generally excellent HDR mode of the Nexus 5. Its a demonstration of what mobile phone HDR should be about – i.e. compensating for the technical limitations of a phone camera, not producing shots that look like theyre inspired by Disneys Fantasia, with every object glowing as if the viewer had just dropped a tab of acid.

The results of the HDR mode do vary depending on the scene, but generally they significantly increase detail in shadow areas, reduce overexposure and even improve white balance/colour reproduction noticeably.

Performance

We would suggest using the HDR mode 24/7 when not shooting action, but speed is a significant issue. At the best of times, the Nexus 5 is not the fastest camera around.

Upon pressing the shutter button, the phone both focuses and takes a shot, and theres about a two second pause between standard shots – longer if youre shooting in poor lighting. With the HDR mode engaged, this gap is increased to 3.5-4 seconds – about as bad as the Lumia 1020, which has to cram a 41-megapixel image down to a 5-megapixel file. It has a pretty good excuse, the Nexus 5 doesnt.

With an iPhone youre looking at about a quarter of a second between standard shots and 1.5-2 seconds between HDR shots. There are reasons beyond image quality why iPhones are fun to shoot with.

Low-light and Optical image stabilisation

The Nexus 5 never claimed to be a photo speed king, but it does claim to be good for low-light shooting thanks to its use of optical image stabilisation.

It works. What OIS lets the Nexus 5 do is to increase exposure time without resulting in blurred images caused by the natural judder of your hand. Longer exposure time equals more light, which equals less noise.

Flash

The Nexus 5 drops down to earth a bit with its single-LED flash. Its nothing special, and has the usual sort of image-skewing effects that make us want to turn it off whenever possible, given the phones use of OIS.

However, it does at least use the LED as a focusing aid when the flash is engaged.

Macro and Depth of Field

The Nexus 5 is able to produce some half-decent macro-style shots thanks to its reasonable detail retrieval, but it has no special skills in this field. Itll focus at around 15cm distance, and the f/2.5 lens isnt capable of any particularly impressive depth of field effects.

Google Nexus 5 - Video Capture


A few mobile phone cameras, including the Samsung Galaxy Note 3, have started to offer 4K video capture, but the Nexus 5 is stuck with more conventional 1080p. However, it too uses the optical image stabilisation that had such a positive effect on low-light performance. Here it quite literally stabilises the image, doing a good job of making handheld footage look less juddery.

Other phones manage fairly well with software video stabilisation, though. You also miss out on HDR video recording and slow/fast motion here – all three are either useful or fun. The Nexus 5 does offer time lapse video recording, though, which shoots a frame at pre-set intervals – such as every half-second. Wed rather have slo-mo, but its hardly a show-stopping issue.

Google Nexus 5 - Front Camera


The Nexus 5 has a much better front camera than the Nexus 4. Its a 1.3-megapixel camera. Once again thats the same resolution used in the Nexus 4, but the results are simply much better this time around – greater detail, and it is able to cope much better with in-frame light sources.

The camera also has a slightly longer focal length than most front cameras, meaning you dont need to hold it as close to get a good selfie angle. Of course, that may not help if youre trying to get a bunch of friends in the photo as well.

Google Nexus 5 - Camera App and Additional Modes


As with all of the Nexus 5s software elements, the phone uses the bog-standard Android 4.4 camera app. Its a slightly quirky, gesture-based affair thats one of the trickier parts of the system to get used to.

Navigation of the menu system isnt intuitive enough, especially as it doesnt give you control beyond that of any other phone.

You do get a few neat extra modes, though. Photosphere lets you take a 360-degree view of your surroundings – a fun extra to experiment with – and panorama is a more conventional (and more easily share-able) pan shot. The quality of the latter is nothing to get too excited about, though – its not full-res like the iPhone panorama.

Google Nexus 5 – Battery Life


One of the slightly limiting parts of the Google Nexus 5 is its battery. The phone has a 2,300mAh power supply, which is a chunk smaller than the 2,600mAh battery of the Samsung Galaxy S4 and the generous 3000mAh battery of the Sony Xperia Z1.

And this limitation shows. With regular use, and apps given free rein to grab mobile data when they like, the Google Nexus 5 will drain most of the way down – if not entirely – within a day.

This is not helped by the lack of a power saving mode. Google made a bunch of power-saving optimisations in Android 4.4, but theres no longer a dedicated power efficiency mode that limits mobile data use, screen brightness and so on.

We would really have liked to see a slightly larger battery used here, as its one part where the Nexus 5 falls behind some of its rivals.

Google Nexus 5 – Call Quality


The call speaker of the phone doesnt lag behind in the same way – although theres only so much you can do with the call quality of normal phone calls. The speaker is loud, clear and has some bulk to its sound. We also didnt experience any speaker crackle, which was a criticism some levelled at the Nexus 4.

The phone also uses active noise cancellation for calls, with a pinhole speaker on the top monitoring ambient noise.

Should I buy the Google Nexus 5?


If you want a top-spec phone but dont want to pay the premium that usually comes with it, there are no better options than the Google Nexus 5. Unlike some other low-cost, high-spec Android phones, its quad-core processor has all the power of the most popular high-end smartphones.

That the Nexus 5 is actually more powerful than the rival HTC One and Galaxy S4 speaks volumes about both its value, and how quickly things move on in the mobile game.

Battery life could be better and the camera isnt quite as reliable as the best out there – despite being great in some respects. However, these issues seem quite minor given the phone is £100-200 cheaper than the competition.

Verdict


The Google Nexus 5 is the high-end Android phone bargain of the year. Aside from a slightly anaemic battery it offers everything phones costing £200 more do.

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