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Thursday, December 27, 2018

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Technology - Google News


Your Instagram feed might be scrolling sideways for no good reason - Engadget

Posted: 27 Dec 2018 07:44 AM PST

Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

If you opened up Instagram today and found that your timeline orientation was totally switched, you weren't alone. It appears that quite a few users had a timeline that moved left to right, where posts could be tapped through as they can be in stories. When the new timeline appeared, Instagram surfaced a notice that said, "Introducing a New Way to Move Through Posts," and told users to tap through to see their posts. However, it seems that this may have been another short test rather than a permanent change to Instagram's feed.

Instagram

Rumors about such a move circulated in October, though at the time it looked like the feature would be limited to the Explore tab. "We're always testing ways to improve the experience on Instagram and bring you closer to the people and things you love," a spokesperson told TechCrunch in October. And they added that introducing the change into the main feed wasn't something the company was actively considering at that point.

It's unclear just how many people had the new feed, but the Independent reported that Instagram users around the world had received it. And many spoke out online about the change.

A number of us at Engadget had the new feed orientation as well, though for some people, the new feature didn't reach all of their accounts. And for at least one of our editors, their feed switched back and forth between the new view and the standard view. It seems this update was another quick test that Instagram has already concluded. We've reached out to Instagram for more information and we'll update this post when we know more.

Update, 12/27/18, 11:08 AM ET: This story's headline and copy have been updated to reflect that this may be another short-term test instead of a permanent change.

Update, 12/27/18, 11:20 AM ET: Adam Mosseri, head of Instagram, tweeted today that the sideways scroll feature was supposed to just be a small-scale test, but the company accidentally extended it to more users than it intended to. If you still have the sideways scroll and you want to revert back to the normal view, just restart the app. We've updated this story's headline and copy to reflect this information.

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Our favorite iOS apps for the iPhone and iPad in 2018 - The Next Web

Posted: 27 Dec 2018 06:00 AM PST

As 2018 comes to a close, it’s time to look at some our favorite apps of the year. While not all of these are brand new, many of them popped up onto our radar for the first time in 2018, and are definitely worth the attention. Others are some of our favorites that are still best-in-class despite having been around for some time now. We aim to do things differently at TNW, and as such you’re not going to find the recommendations you’re probably used to seeing: Gmail, Skype, Dropbox, and the like.

Instead, we want to focus on the best-of-the-best that you may not have heard of, and others that are just special enough to warrant a mention. As always, we’d encourage you to share some of your favorites in the comments below, or on Facebook.

Enlight Pixaloop (Free)

Pixaloop is one of my favorite apps on the market. Unlike typical image editors that allow you to remove red eye or apply a filter, Pixaloop allows you to create stunning photo animations with a few clicks on your mobile device. Take a photo, add arrows to define motion areas, and then choose the speed of movement. That’s it. Whether it’s a flickering candle, or a cloudy sky passing you by, the results are sure to take your photos to a whole new level.

Fantastical 2 ($1.99)

This one has been around a while, but I still can’t find a better calendar app than Fantastical. What makes it great is the ability to add reminders and calendar entries with natural speech. Rather than inputting each field, you can just say (or type) “Meeting with Joe on Monday at 8am” and Fantastical handles the rest. It’s like having an assistant around to jot down items on your calendar or to-do list.

Bear (Free)

I’ve written previously about my love for Bear here, but all you really need to know is that it’s Apple Notes on steroids. Bear offers elegant new styling options, the ability to add notes in markup, and one of the easiest tag-based systems around to help you stay organized.

Daily Focus (Free)

Daily Focus is a new photography training app from the minds at Creative Live. This free app allows you to improve your photo skills by taking one curated lesson each day. In about five minutes a day, you’ll be on your way to shooting like a professional in no time. And if you tire of the lessons, there are great how-to’s and challenges to embark on as well.

Prisma Photo Editor (Free)

Prisma has been a TNW favorite for a while now. The app allows you to upload photos, apply some really amazing artistic filters — with new filters released each day — and share your creations on social media. It’s been around since 2016, and we still haven’t been able to put it down.

Housecraft (Free)

Of all the AR apps on the market, few are genuinely useful. Housecraft is one of these apps. Housecraft allows both professional and amateur interior designers to place a number of 3D models throughout their house. Whether you’re looking to see if that chair you’ve been wanting fits in your living room, or how your front porch will look with a little greenery, Housecraft has you covered.

If you can’t find what you’re looking for in Housecraft, Ikea Place (free) is another great augmented reality option.

Deliveries: A Package Tracker ($4.99)

If you get a lot of packages delivered, like I do, then it’s worth forking over the $5 for an app that can keep track of them. Unlike Android users, who can rely on Google to track packages by picking tracking numbers out of email automatically, Apple doesn’t have a default option to do this. And while Deliveries still isn’t as good as Google’s Android version, it’s certainly your best bet on the iPhone.

Oak Meditation & Breathing (Free)

There are a ton of meditation apps on the market, but Oak is undoubtedly my favorite. Oak helps anyone who could use a few minutes of downtime to decompress by providing full-blown guided meditation, or just simple breathing exercises to de-stress on that five minute break. At night, you can use Oak to help fall asleep through one of several relaxing sounds playing gently in the background. Aside from the cool features, Oak is one of the prettiest iOS apps you’ll ever lay eyes on.

Tasty (Free)

Tasty brings a fresh approach to cooking by providing all of your favorite recipes in a visually-rich app, most with short videos to guide you. It’s not the most feature-rich recipe app, nor does it offer the most variety. But what it’s great at is holding your hand and taking some of the guesswork out of cooking.

Round Health (Free)

Round Health is a beautiful, minimalist medical app that has one simple task: to remind you when to take your medication. Aside from a simple reminder system, you can track what you’ve taken on its built-in calendar, and store a complete list of your medications, vitamins, and supplements in one place should you ever need to share it with a medical professional in an emergency.

Carrot Weather ($4.99)

What sets Carrot apart isn’t just in features or its ability to accurately forecast the weather. It’s the onboard assistant, a snarky and hilarious creation that’s a bit like a meteorologist who’s really just over it and ready to go home. Come for the weather, stay for the hilarious interactions, meatbag.

Sleep Cycle Alarm Clock (Free)

Apple users love Sleep Cycle (more than 37,000 ratings in the App Store). What makes it great is the detailed, patented analysis of not only how much you’re sleeping, but the quality of sleep you’re getting each night. Simply put the phone next to your bed (not on your bed, like others) and Sleep Cycle uses sound analysis to track just about everything that goes on after you lay down at night. Once captured, the app plots the data on beautiful charts that help you find ways to increase your sleep quality. It’s like Apple‘s sleep app, but on steroids.

Yousician (Free)

As someone that’s trying to learn to play the guitar, take it from me that Yousician is about the easiest and most fun way to pick up a new instrument. The app has lessons for the piano, guitar, bass, or ukulele, and offers some truly entertaining, Guitar Hero-style training games to help you progress quickly. It’s not a magic bullet by any means, but I find that the more fun I’m having, the more likely I am to keep practicing. And Yousician is the most fun I’ve ever had taking guitar lessons.

Shortcuts (Free)

Apple set the world on fire when it announced Siri Shortcuts earlier this year. While the app isn’t installed on iOS by default, you can pick it up in the app store and begin scheduling simple or complex automated actions using Siri. There are more than 300 built-in actions included, or you can create your own. One user created a Shortcut to activate his iPhone during a police stop, all with a simple “Hey Siri” trigger.

JigSpace (Free)

JigSpace is another great augmented reality app that teaches through use of immersive 3D objects. Simply point your phone at a surface in front of you and watch as digital objects come to life. It’s here that you can learn about the inside of cells, or perhaps what makes a deadbolt, or your car’s transmission work.

Canary Mail ($9.99)

My hatred of email is well-known at this point, but Canary makes it somewhat bearable. While expensive, at $10, it’s a sleek and stylish app that combines some of your favorite features from other mobile email platforms, like Mailbox, Spark, and Airmail. But best of all, Canary has end-to-end encryption built in.

You can check out our full review here.

Narwhal (Free)

Reddit’s mobile app, until recently, was all but unusable. Still, it’s hard to go back, even to the newly-improved version designed by Reddit. Narwhal is a fast, gesture-based application that brings all of Reddit to a mobile screen, and in a way that even Reddit itself hasn’t quite mastered.

Streaks ($4.99)

Streaks is a minimal app designed to help you form good habits. It’s also an Apple Design Award winner. Inside the app you can track up to twelve tasks you want to complete each day. Whether that’s not lighting up a cigarette, running, or just remembering to floss at night, Streaks exists to gamify habit-building tasks.

Annotable (Free)

Annotable is another oldie-but-goodie from 2016. What’s great about the app is the ability to annotate any document or image, with a suite of really powerful tools all on your iPhone or iPad.

Pixelmator ($4.99)

Adobe is slowly, but surely making a dent on the photo-editing space in iOS. While the full app hasn’t come to iOS just yet, a number of smaller, feature-specific ones have. But, if you’re looking for a full-fledged photo-editing suite, Pixelmator is still your best bet. Pixelmator drops the pretext that you’re a design expert and instead offers an easy-to-use interface that’s full of tools designed to do everything from remove red eye, to work on full-blown composite images for the web or print.

You can check out our previous Pixelmator recommendation here.

Hours (Free)

Hours is another beautifully-designed app that allows anyone to track the amount of time they spend on specific tasks. Whether you’re a freelancer tracking billable hours for a client, or a parent wanting to keep track of how long your kids are spending on homework, Hours is a top-notch app that’s sure to help you out.

Purify ($1.99)

Purify is, in my opinion, the best ad-blocking app for iOS. It works right out of the box with Safari and has a simple but powerful options screen that allows you to control what gets through and what it blocks. The company estimates mobile web pages load four times faster when Purify is enabled. And it’s not just ads. Purify is also great at blocking websites and social media platforms from tracking you as you move around the web.

Tunity (Free)

Tunity came out in 2017, although it just hit my radar in recent weeks. It’s sort of the app you’ve always wanted, but probably didn’t realize existed. Tunity is made for those sitting in a bar, or at the gym, that are watching a TV but unable to hear the volume. Now, they can simply scan the screen and connect to the audio feed of whatever is on, allowing them to pop in some earbuds and catch whatever it is they were missing on TV.

Yonder (Free)

Yonder is the antithesis of most other apps. Rather than trying to keep you engaged and staring at your screen, Yonder wants to get you outside, to explore beautiful places that deserve your attention. Better still, it attempts to connect you with other people who might like to enjoy them with you.

Donut County ($4.99)

A list of apps isn’t complete without a great game to fill your time when waiting in line, or in transit. Donut County is that game for us. It’s a story-based physics puzzler that has a really unique premise that we won’t ruin here. We will say, however, that Ben Esposito is behind it, and he’s perhaps best-known for another of our favorites, What Remains of Edith Finch. While this game is nothing like Edith Finch, it’s a wonderful time-waster that we couldn’t recommend more.

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Another new Android phone with a camera hole in the display just beat the Galaxy S10 to market - BGR

Posted: 27 Dec 2018 03:50 AM PST

The Galaxy S10 should hit stores at some point in early March, according to recent reports, which gives Samsung’s biggest Android rival some two months to sell phones featuring almost the same Galaxy S10 design. A brand new flagship phone just launched, sporting top specs in addition to that brand new screen design, as well as an affordable price.

Samsung’s next flagship will come in four versions, including Galaxy S10 Lite, Edge, Plus, and 5G, but all of them will have the same Infinity-O screen design. That means you get a flat (for the Lite) or curved display (all the others) that extends from corner to corner, featuring minimal top and bottom bezels, as well as a camera hole at the top.

So far, Samsung launched the Galaxy A8s to introduce Infinity-O screens, but the phone is a mid-range device, packing an LCD screen. The Galaxy S10 phones, meanwhile, will have OLED displays, with Samsung supposedly holding an exclusive Infinity-O manufacturing technique for OLED panels.

Huawei a few days ago, launched the Nova 4 handset, a device that features a design just like the Galaxy A8s. And now, the company unveiled the Honor View 20 in China. Honor is Huawei’s other smartphone brand, which sells more affordable devices.

Image Source: Huawei

The new handset has an all-screen Infinity-O-like screen, with the punch-hole camera measuring just 4.5mm. However, unlike the Galaxy S10 which is expected to pack a slim bottom bezel, the Honor View 20 has a noticeably bigger chin on the bottom.

The View 20 will be more affordable than competing models, although it’ll feature the high-end features we expect from a 2019 Huawei device. We’re looking at a 6.4-inch LCD with 2310 x 1080 resolution, 6GB or 8GB of LPDDR4X RAM, 128GB of storage, microSD support, 48-megapixel Sony rear camera and secondary rear-facing time-of-flight lens, 25-megapixel selfie camera, 4,000 mAh battery with SuperCharge support, dual-SIM support, and Android 9.1 Pie with MagicUI on top.

The phone packs the same 7nm processor that Huawei introduced earlier this year for the Mate 20 series and the same main camera sensor as the Nova 4. Because Honor phones are supposed to be cheaper, the View 20 will stick to a rear-facing fingerprint sensor, and the phone does have a headphone jack.

The 6GB version costs 2,999 yuan, or around $435, but Huawei will also sell versions with 8GB of RAM, as well as a special edition model that packs 256GB of storage. Following the Chinese launch, the phone will be unveiled in Europe on January 22nd.

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