Amazon brings Cloud Drive Photos app to Android, keeps your shots safe

Amazon brings Cloud Drive Photos app to Android, keeps your shots safe

Looks like releasing its first in-house-built mobile game for Android (and other platforms) wasn’t quite enough for the online retail giant. Amazon announced earlier that its Cloud Drive Photos application is now available on Android for both handset and tablets, giving users of Google’s OS a cloud-based hub to use for uploading, saving, sharing and viewing pictures — of course this also includes the retailer’s kind handout of 5G of free storage, though folks could easily upgrade to 20GB for a $10 per-year fee. The Cloud Drive Photos app is up for download now, so hit that Google Play link below if you’re looking for yet another place to keep all those awesome shots you snap with your device.

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Amazon brings Cloud Drive Photos app to Android, keeps your shots safe originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 01 Nov 2012 15:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon Game Studios releases its first mobile game, Air Patriots, for iOS, Android and Kindle Fire

Amazon Game Studios releases its first game, Air Patriots, for iOS, Android and Kindle Fire

Amazon made its first push into in-house game development this summer with the launch of Amazon Game Studios and its first title, the Facebook-bound Living Classics, and its now made its second big move. The company announced today that its first mobile game, Air Patriots, is now available for iOS, Android and Kindle Fire devices (and free on each, albeit with in-app purchases). Not surprisingly, Amazon has paid particular attention to the Kindle Fire version, taking advantage of GameCircle to track achievements and high scores, as well as Whispersync to let you save your progress on one device and pick up where you left off on another. As for the game itself, Amazon says it’s a “new kind of tower defense game,” with players drawing a path for the planes to fend off the oncoming tanks. Head on past the break for a quick video.

Update: As some commenters have pointed out, while the game supports a variety of Android devices, it looks like the Nexus 7 isn’t among them.

Continue reading Amazon Game Studios releases its first mobile game, Air Patriots, for iOS, Android and Kindle Fire

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Amazon Game Studios releases its first mobile game, Air Patriots, for iOS, Android and Kindle Fire originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 01 Nov 2012 11:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon Cloud Drive Photos app launches for Android

If you’re an avid Amazon Cloud Drive user and happen to use an Android device as your daily driver, you might be pleased to know that Amazon released an app to help you take care of all your photos. The Cloud Drive Photos app from Amazon looks to put your photos in the cloud and organize them for quick and easy access.

Amazon is making it easy to save photos that you take with your Android device to your Cloud Drive with the new app. All you have to do is press and hold down on a photo on your Android device, and select “Upload to Cloud Drive.” After that, you can view the photos in any web browser or on your other Android devices.

You can also share photos directly from your Cloud Drive accounts to other social apps, such as Facebook, Twitter, Google+, and even email. However, the app doesn’t have an automatic upload feature like Google+ and Dropbox, but for those who want a simpler photo storage app that looks good, Amazon’s offering seems to be a good bet.

Amazon says that it’s Photos app, along with its MP3 app, is already integrated into the company’s new Kindle Fire HD tablet, but now you can take advantage of the service on your own Android device. Amazon’s Cloud Drive provides 5GB of storage for free, and you can purchase more storage starting at $10 per year for 20GB.

The Cloud Drive Photos app is a free download and is available now in the Google Play Store as well as the Amazon Appstore for Android.


Amazon Cloud Drive Photos app launches for Android is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Amazon Air Patriots game released to push Kindle GameCircle

Amazon Game Studios has launched its first title for Kindle Fire users, Air Patriots, complete with GameCircle achievements and Whispersync for synchronizing progress to the cloud. The game – also available for iPhone, iPad, and Android users – is a simple tower defense style title, but what makes it distinct is that it’s the retailer’s debut mobile game, as Amazon attempts to strengthen its position against Apple and Google.

In Air Patriots, players can guide a squadron of planes through territory by sketching out a flight plan with their finger. Bombs can be dropped on enemy tanks, and the route of the squadron changed midway through by re-drawing it.

Although the game works on iOS and other Android hardware, Amazon’s real goal is to push its own cloud services. GameCircle, for instance, was announced back in July as a push back against Apple’s Game Center, and allows multiple Kindle Fire devices to synchronize highscore tables and allow gamers to pause and resume gameplay on different units with Whispersync.

Seven maps and various planes are included, plus unlockable levels. HD-compatible devices get an HD version of Air Patriots, and the game is free to download on all platforms. Amazon’s studio previously released Living Classics in August, built on Facebook’s browser-based gaming platform.


Amazon Air Patriots game released to push Kindle GameCircle is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Editorial: Apple vs. everyone

Editorial Apple vs everyone

It’s a big storm, moving slowly. A gigantic span of ferocious swirl meets a front of chilly resistance. The effect of that collision is amplified by powerful tidal influence. Upheavals and surges swamp the landscape. Many people are displaced; countless others stay with the familiar.

Also, in the real world, some nasty weather is happening. But I’m talking about the tech industry of the last five business days, which has aligned and concentrated its forces in a crystal-clear demonstration, if one were needed, that mobile is where the bets are placed and futures will be won and lost.

Apple is at the eye of the storm, where its devoted legions expect it, but no longer as a pioneer. Defending its territory rather than breaking new ground, the post-Jobs company did something its late and fabled leader scorned, split hairs to justify it, engaged in implicit combat with four competitors, ticked off some of its best customers and was squeezed by inexorable pressure of a quickly evolving industry.

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Editorial: Apple vs. everyone originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Oct 2012 16:30:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Nexus 10 vs. the competition: fight!

Nexus 10 vs the competition fight!

Google undoubtedly upset the tablet market almost overnight with the Nexus 10: that record-setting 2,560 x 1,600 resolution, Exynos 5 Dual, Android 4.2 and all-important $399 starting price just tilted price-performance balance in a different direction than we’d seen even a week ago. But how does it stack up against its competition? We’ve included full details of the devices in a chart after the break; initial appearances suggest that pure performance hounds may like the Nexus 10 the most, although it doesn’t have the most diverse options for cellular data or storage. We’ll know the real tale of the tape once the Nexus 10 reaches our hands.

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Nexus 10 vs. the competition: fight! originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Oct 2012 15:50:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Roku update adds cross-provider search over Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, HBO, Vudu and Crackle

Roku update adds crossprovider search across Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, HBO, Vudu and Crackle

We’ve seen web portals that let you search for TV and movies on the internet across different services, but a new update for Roku is bringing that capability directly to its set-top boxes. Whether you’re searching by movie, TV show, actor or director it will sniff out related content across some of the higher profile services it offers, including Netflix, Amazon Instant Video, Hulu Plus, Crackle, Vudu and HBO Go. The new Roku Search function is front and center (once your second gen HD or higher player has been updated to the latest version) and in our tests worked quickly, pulling up content wherever it was available and mentioning if it was available in HD. The only downside is navigating the onscreen keyboard via remote, although you can always sub in your mobile device thanks to those recently upgraded remote apps for iOS and Android. All in all Roku says it can reach its tendrils across around 130,000 titles and almost 100,000 actors and directors. Check after the break for a couple of screenshots and a quick demo video, hit the official blog for more info or force an update on your hockey puck to check it out yourself.

Continue reading Roku update adds cross-provider search over Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, HBO, Vudu and Crackle

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Roku update adds cross-provider search over Netflix, Amazon, Hulu, HBO, Vudu and Crackle originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 29 Oct 2012 12:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Amazon slams iPad mini in Kindle Fire HD attack ad

Amazon has directly called out Apple’s new iPad mini in a homepage attack advert, criticizing the new 7.9-inch iOS tablet for falling short in specifications versus the Kindle Fire HD. The comparison, seen when you first visit Amazon’s US site, contrasts the $199 Kindle Fire HD with its 216ppi, 7-inch display against the $329 iPad mini, which has a 163ppi display. That’s not the only shortcoming, Amazon maintains.

The Kindle Fire HD also has a set of stereo speakers, while the iPad mini makes do with mono, and MiMo WiFi for faster connections, Amazon writes. The retailer also points out that the new, smaller iPad can’t watch HD movies and TV shows, though of course that’s a limitation solely of the Apple tablet’s integrated display: it can also be used to stream at up to 1080p via AirPlay Video, or with an HDMI adapter for directly hooking up to a TV.

It’s not the first time in recent days that Amazon has singled out Apple’s new tablet. The company made similar comparisons in its financial results, published on Thursday last week. “Our approach is to work hard to charge less” CEO Jeff Bezos argued. “Sell devices near breakeven and you can pack a lot of sophisticated hardware into a very low price point.”

Still, the retailer has Apple’s own example to go on. The company directly contrasted the iPad mini with Google’s Nexus 7 during its launch event last week, calling out the smaller display and larger bezels of the Android slate.

Preorders of the iPad mini began on Friday last week, with deliveries – and in-store sales – of the WiFi variant set to begin this coming Friday. Shipments of the WiFi + Cellular model will begin later in November.


Amazon slams iPad mini in Kindle Fire HD attack ad is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Amazon Gets Feisty, Updates Homepage To Talk Smack On The iPad Mini

amazonsmack

Competition in the low-cost tablet space has been heating up for a while now thanks to strong new hardware from the likes of Asus, Google, and Barnes & Noble, but it seems the time has come for the Kindle Fire hucksters at Amazon to go on the offensive against a very prominent rival: Apple’s iPad mini.

The company has recently given its homepage a facelift with a very prominent comparison between the 7-inch Kindle Fire HD and the iPad mini sitting right at the top. Most of it is pretty tame and points out the disparity in features between the two tablets (ex. the Fire HD sports a higher resolution display and smarter speaker layout than the mini), but the kicker here is the quote Amazon used to drive its point home. It’s a brief snippet culled from a Gizmodo post by Brent Rose on Apple’s perceived hypocrisy when it came to crafting a smaller tablet:

“…your [Apple’s] 7.9-inch tablet has far fewer pixels than the competing 7-inch tablets! You’re cramming a worse screen in there, charging more, and accusing others of compromise? Ballsy.”

For better or worse Amazon lopped off the beginning of that paragraph, which began with “Are. You. Fucking. Kidding. Me.” Sort of a shame, methinks — it would’ve made Amazon’s point that much stronger, though I’m pleased as punch to see Amazon allow such a prominent reference to balls on its front page.

It’s hardly the first time that Amazon has sought to position its tablets as a strong competitor to the iPad — Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos noted in an interview with AllThingsD that he felt the 8.9-inch Kindle Fire HD was “the best tablet at any price” — but this move represents a considerable change in tone for Amazon. Then again, this sort of trash-talking seems to be quickly becoming par for the course in the industry — when Apple officially revealed the iPad mini earlier this month, SVP of Worldwide Marketing Phil Schiller jabbed at smaller tablets (and Google and Asus’s own Nexus 7 in particular) by basically crapping on the sorts of experiences that they’re capable of delivering.

“Others have tried to make tablets smaller than the iPad, and they’ve failed miserably,” Schiller noted on-stage.

One has to wonder what exactly has prompted Amazon to go on the offensive, and it may be that surging sales momentum may have given the company a shot in the proverbial arm. According to a statement Amazon released on Friday, the 7-inch Kindle Fire HD enjoyed its biggest day of sales since launch on the same day that Apple’s iPad mini announcement took place. It went on to note that sales for the Seattle company’s tablet lifted “3x week over week” on the day of Apple’s event, though exactly what that works out to in numbers is unclear since Amazon tends to be infuriatingly vague when it comes to concrete Kindle sales figures.

With a season of unabashed consumerism nearly upon us, we’ll soon see if Amazon’s new approach to appealing to would-be tablet purchasers pans out. In the meantime, here’s a tip for anyone from Amazon who may be reading this — next time you need an feisty anti-iPad quote or five, you should spend some time checking out our comments section. Pure gold, I’m telling you.


Amazon Sold the Most Kindle Fire HDs since Launch the Day After the iPad Mini Was Announced

If you’re wondering if the iPad Mini had an effect on its competitors, it did. Just not the one you were thinking. The Kindle Fire HD actually had its biggest day of sales since its launch, the day after the iPad Mini was announced. More »