So you think you’re a smartphone expert. You know your iPhone or Android phone inside and out and you constantly help your friends and family with their mobile problems
Android 5.0 Lollipop is a huge upgrade for Google’s mobile operating system. The only problem with it, of course, is that it’s only available for a handful of devices
Mostly you just ignore those notifications and continue your work. Alternatively, you are one of those who get attached to these notifications and forget what you are doing. You may wish for there to be an app that could read your notifications for you so you don’t have to look at your phone’s screen only to see that a friend of yours has just posted his boring party picture. Well, a developer has just fulfilled your wish.
Android 5.0 Lollipop brings with it a great user interface and a number of improvements to make Android devices run as smoothly as possible. While there are a number of devices that have been confirmed to receive this latest update, there are other devices that aren’t lucky enough to be updated to the Android 5.0 Lollipop.
A recent report from a supposed Samsung insider suggests that we don’t have long to wait at all for Samsung’s blast of Android 5.0 Lollipop updates for the Galaxy S5 and Galaxy Note 4 smartphones.
As it turns out, however, users still clinging to 2013’s Galaxy Note 3 model now have access to the latest and greatest mobile software Google has to offer even before people with Samsung’s flagship phablet from 2014.
You already have your smartphone on you all the time. Why not use it as the place you store your daily private thoughts? Here are four Android apps for doing just that.
Do you want to make a video call to your friend using computer but you don’t have a webcam? Not to worry as there is a new software named DroidCam which lets you convert your Android phone device into Web Camera on your Windows system.
You have an Android phone. You love your Android phone. Of course, there’s plenty to love about Google’s terrific mobile operating system, but much of it comes back to the simple fact that Android is open.
Thanks to the way Google allows third-party developers to use nearly all of the tools and features at their disposal in Android, the sky is the limit when it comes to developing apps that add all sorts of great functionality to Android phones — and much of it is functionality that iPhone users will likely never enjoy.