Amazon Android App Store Apps and Prices Get Early Reveal

A screen shot of part of the page you would see when visiting amazon.com/apps before it was taken down. Photo: androidnews.de

Android fans shouldn’t have to wait too much longer for Amazon’s anticipated Android App Store.

A sneaky Android fan typed http://www.amazon.com/apps into his address bar and discovered a horizontal sliding menu of 48 apps and their prices.

Popular titles and tools such as EasyTether, Wolfram Alpha, Zenonia, SetCPU, and The Moron Test appear to be among the app store’s premier lineup.

The link above has since been removed; it now redirects to Amazon’s homepage. Before its removal, you could view the apps as long as you were logged out of your Amazon account. If you were logged in, Recent History recommendations would replace the app suggestions.

Amazon’s Android App Store, which was announced back in September, will be an alternative to Google’s own App Store, and is reported to be curated more like Apple’s App Store: Amazon will select what goes in, rather than Google’s “anything goes” policy. Also unlike Apple, Google allows multiple app stores on its Android operating system.

The screenshots support the claim that Amazon’s Android apps will be competitively priced with Google’s app store. Most apps are priced identically across both markets, a few are slightly cheaper, and a handful are more expensive. A full listing of the apps and their prices are available at the source link.

Although a firm release date hasn’t been set, the service is expected to launch “very soon” and will exclusively feature the Angry Birds Rio game.

Amazon Appstore: Apps and Prices Leak [androidnews.de]


Sidekick Gets New Start With Android, 4G, Hotspotting

The Sidekick line’s newest installment, the Android-running Sidekick 4G

The T-Mobile Sidekick, which recently got its data services put to rest for good, will be getting a second life as the Android-based Sidekick 4G.

The Sidekick 4G will be the first Sidekick to include a touchscreen, in this case a 3.5-inch display, but other than that, the looks stay true to the brand’s signature stylings: the same overall shape, the same 5-row QWERTY keyboard. The display slides out with a “pop-tilt” hinge (not the swiveling screen of old), and an optical trackball has been put in place of the old physical trackball.

Group Text and Cloud Text apps appear to be key features of the device, letting users send messages in a reply-all fashion while texting groups and friends from multiple devices, such as your laptop or desktop computer, in addition to the Sidekick.

“We’ve reinvented the messaging experience that made the Sidekick such an iconic device, and supercharged it with communication and entertainment experiences that take full advantage of our 4G network,” says Andrew Sherrard, T-Mobile’s senior vice president of product management.

The T-Mobile Sidekick is the phone that (arguably) started the smartphone revolution in 2002. Before the iPhone burst onto the scene, wowing us with its capacitive touch display and light, slender form, the Sidekick kept us connected with instant messaging through its signature spin-out display and QWERTY keyboard. It was an especially big hit among teens, whose texting habits primed them to see the value of a keyboard (and who were about as likely to use a BlackBerry as they were to wear a navy blue blazer).

Over the years the Sidekick got upgraded, and upgraded again, but it eventually lost out to a new breed of app-filled, touchscreen smartphones.

The Sidekick 4G built by Samsung is an attempt to make the iconic name competitive with today’s best smartphones. Accordingly, it’s got the obligatory 1-GHz processor (a Cortex A8 Hummingbird). It runs Android 2.2 Froyo, a respectably recent version of Google’s mobile operating system.

According to a T-Mobile statement, “Android continues to be a strategic bet for T-Mobile, and we’re expanding the current lineup to offer a robust messaging experience on a popular platform — at speeds as fast as your home broadband.”

The Sidekick will also act as a mobile hotspot for up to five devices, and it will connect with T-Mobile’s 4G network, wherever that is available.

Of course, 4G doesn’t mean what it used to. In this case, it refers to T-Mobile’s HSPA+ network, which the carrier claims will give you 5 to 10 Mbps of download bandwidth.

If you used to own a Sidekick, would you ditch your current phone for a 4G Android version? Sound off in the comments.

Sidekick 4G [T-Mobile via MobileCrunch and Android Community]


Android 2.2 is now the dominant version of Google’s OS with 61.3 percent of all active devices

Considering that we’re about nine months removed from Google’s release of Froyo, you’d expect that version of its mobile OS to have been distributed quite widely by now and indeed it has. 61.3 percent of (the many) active Android devices — handsets and tablets, anything with access to the Market is eligible — worldwide are now running version 2.2, making it the most prevalent iteration of the software at the moment. Even more encouraging news is that, when taken together with Android 2.1, that group swells to account for more than 90 percent of active Google devices. If you want to look at the reverse, rather moldy, side of the coin, however, you’ll note that the latest mobile version of the OS, Gingerbread (2.3), is only on 1 percent of devices, while the absolute finest Android, Honeycomb (3.0), barely scrapes a couple tenths of a percent together. So yes, things are moving inexorably forward, just not as rapidly as some might have hoped.

Android 2.2 is now the dominant version of Google’s OS with 61.3 percent of all active devices originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Mar 2011 05:46:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Thunderbolt now available to buy: $250 from Verizon, $180 at Amazon

Another saga put to rest. The question of just when Verizon will release its first 4G LTE handset was answered yesterday with the word “tomorrow,” which makes today that day! Verizon Wireless is now taking online orders for HTC’s 4.3-inch Thunderbolt, pricing the LTE lubber at $250 on a two-year contract. It comes with Android 2.2 as the OS underlying the HTC Sense 2.0 UI, an 8 megapixel camera with HD video recording, 768MB of RAM, and a 1GHz Qualcomm MSM8655 chip that will have to do its best to keep up with those crazy 4G download speeds. If Verizon’s own pricing feels a bit rich to you, shop around — we’ve found the Thunderbolt as low as $180 at Amazon, although the online retailer has it on back order for the moment.

[Thanks, Justin]

Continue reading HTC Thunderbolt now available to buy: $250 from Verizon, $180 at Amazon

HTC Thunderbolt now available to buy: $250 from Verizon, $180 at Amazon originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Mar 2011 04:04:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Will a $200 ASUS Eee PC finally ship with Google’s help?

As hard as it tried, ASUS never could get its Eee PC prices down to $200 MSRP as promised way back in 2007 — a time when Intel-based netbooks still shipped with Linux distros and “tablet PCs” ran a Microsoft OS. Fast forward to today and netbooks are being kicked to the curb for ARM-based tablets running smartphone operating systems. To compete, ASUS, a company that’s become synonymous with netbooks, is planning to ship an unsubsidized $200 to $250 netbook running Android 3.0 or Chrome OS in June. According to DigiTimes sources, anyway, who tend to be pretty accurate with regard to Taiwanese companies. If true then expect to see it announced at Computex which kicks off in Taiwan on May 31st.

Will a $200 ASUS Eee PC finally ship with Google’s help? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Mar 2011 03:06:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple and Android get drafted, soldier-centric Army apps coming soon

If we referred to an Apple or Android army, you might assume we’re talking about a legion of brand-loyal fanboys, with which most Engadget commenters are intimately familiar. Defense contractors, however, are trying to turn the US Army into a lethal Apple / Android force with soldier-centric apps. Harris Corp. has a tablet app in the works that allows soldiers to control IP cameras on UAVs for more pertinent intel on the ground while simultaneously sending that information to command centers anywhere in the world. Meanwhile, Intelligent Software Solutions aims to bring mapping mashups to the battlefield (no purpose-built device needed) with an app that combines smartphones’ geolocation with historical data to show troops what’s been going down in the area — from IED explosions to insurgent arrests. Best of all, these apps lower training costs since most warriors are already fluent in Android or iOS and the consumer handhelds can be cheaply ruggedized to replace the more robust $10,000 units in the field today. Should protective measures fail, the devices’ (relatively) low replacement cost makes them “almost disposable.”

Apple and Android get drafted, soldier-centric Army apps coming soon originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Mar 2011 02:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HTC Shooter appears for Sprint with Android 2.3.2, qHD screen and dual-core CPU?

We still haven’t heard what happened to the HTC Glacier, but the GLBenchmark database brings word of another mysterious high-end phone from Taiwan — the HTC Shooter, which is very likely equipped with a dual-core Qualcomm processor. The “PG86100” certainly identifies itself as carrying a speedy new Adreno 220 GPU, which is typically paired with twin processing units, and should help push plenty of pixels to the 960 x 540 screen that’s presently displaying Android Gingerbread 2.3.2. All in all, it sounds a lot like the rumored HTC Pyramid for T-Mobile — except this one’s apparently destined for Sprint. Could it be the EVO 3D, or something wholly different? We’ll likely find out next week at CTIA 2011.

Update: The HTC Glacier actually reappeared as the T-Mobile myTouch 4G — that second-gen 1GHz Snapdragon CPU (at a time when other handsets ran the same Scorpion core at 800MHz) was responsible for the high scores we saw. [Thanks, Mitch]

HTC Shooter appears for Sprint with Android 2.3.2, qHD screen and dual-core CPU? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Mar 2011 18:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Blog of Mobile!!, PocketNow, Android Community  |  sourceGLBenchmark  | Email this | Comments

Motorola Droid 3 for Verizon breaks cover once again

Want some more Droid 3 eye candy? If you just recently bought a Droid 2, the answer is probably “no, please, no” — but nonetheless, we’ve got some for you. A couple more shots of the rumored refresh have popped up on HowardForums once again, showing off a QWERTY keyboard that looks largely similar to the one it’s replacing with one very, very notable exception: it’s a 5-row deal this time around with what appear to be half-height keys for the numeric row. People love 5-row keyboards, so if this is legit — and we really have no reason to doubt that it is — that feature alone could move a lot of phones. More on this soon, we hope.

Motorola Droid 3 for Verizon breaks cover once again originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Mar 2011 15:53:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hacking Competition Leaves Android and Windows Phone 7 Devices Undefeated

The Nexus S is the Android phone target in the 2011 Pwn2Own competition.

From the results of the Pwn2Own hacking competition, it looks like Android and Windows Phone 7 are tough nuts to crack.

It took only two days for hackers to crack into the Apple and Blackberry operating systems during the three-day Pwn2Own tournament last week, while Android and Windows Phone 7 models were abandoned and left unhacked by the end of the contest.

Is this because their operating systems are more secure? Yes and no.

“The survival of a target at Pwn2Own does not automatically declare it safer than a target that went down,” last year’s Internet Explorer Pwn2Own winner Peter Vreugdenhil cautions. The contestants who were lined up to beat the Android and WP7 devices in the competition withdrew for a variety of reasons.

Pwn2Own, now in its fifth year, is a hacking competition divided into two areas: web browsers and mobile phones.

This year, Microsoft Internet Explorer 8, Apple Safari 5.0.3, Mozilla Firefox, and Google Chrome were the web-browser targets. In the mobile phone category, the Dell Venue Pro (Windows Phone 7), Apple iPhone 4 (iOS), BlackBerry Torch 9800 (Blackberry 6) and Nexus S (Android) were targeted. The OS and browser versions were frozen last week (so for example, Apple’s Safari 5.0.4 update was not used), ensuring that all contestants are working on the same version of each OS.

Pwning and owning occurs if the hacker defeats the frozen version. If the exploit they used still exists in the current firmware, they are also eligible to receive a monetary prize. The 2011 Pwn2Own competition ran March 9 to 11.

Vreugdenhil says many different factors determine how hard a target is to hack. There’s the safety of the software itself, the exploit mitigations that are already in place for that software, and then the amount of research that has already been conducted (which can speed up the process of writing an actual exploit).

Firefox and Chrome web browsers were also left undefeated because contestants withdrew from Pwn2Own.

“Chrome has the advantages of having multiple exploit-mitigation techniques that certainly make it more difficult to hack. As for Android, we see no particular reason why Android would be harder to hack than one of the other targets.”

Safari, Chrome, iPhone, Android and Blackberry all use WebKit in their browsers, which means that they are all susceptible to exploitation through the browser — and that’s exactly how the iPhone and Blackberry were attacked.

Charlie Miller, a Pwn2Own veteran, worked with Dion Blazakis to hack the iPhone 4 in this year’s competition using a flaw in its Mobile Safari Web browser and a “specially-crafted webpage.” A team of 3 (Vincenzo Iozzo, Willem Pinckaers, and Ralf Philipp Weinmenn) defeated the BlackBerry Torch using a similar technique.

So what did the contest’s organizers think of the outcome of 2011’s Pwn2Own?

Vreugdenhil and other organizers were not surprised that the iPhone went down quickly. It has been a major target and a lot of research has already been done on that platform.

Android’s survival was a bit of a surprise, since it is also a big target and had four contestants lined up.

Although no device is unhackable, some factors contribute to a safer product. For those that are out to find the safest phone on the market, Vreugdenhil says you’ll want to compare features such as DEP (Data Execution Prevention), ASLR (address space layout randomization), Sandboxing, code signing and the ease with which software can be updated on the device.

Pwn2Own Day 2 [Ars Technica]


Netflix for Android leaks out, doesn’t seem to stream video right now

This prototype LG Revolution may be the only Android phone actually capable of streaming Netflix at the moment, but there’s nothing keeping you from giving it a go — some enterprising hacker extracted a full system dump from the Revolution this week, tossed it to AndroidSPIN, and @al3xevolved subsequently pulled out the juicy Netflix innards. The app’s APK is now freely available on the web, though we’ll warn you that it isn’t good for much — you can browse and add items to your queue, but should you try to play a video the app will inform you that it “could not reach the Netflix service.” The question is, will Netflix simply flip a switch to turn streaming on, or is it waiting for DRM authentication from a Qualcomm MSM8655 processor?

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Netflix for Android leaks out, doesn’t seem to stream video right now originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Mar 2011 01:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Android Police  |  source@al3xevolved (Twitter), (2), (3), (4)  | Email this | Comments