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Wednesday 5 December 2012

Star Wars Speederbike, in Real Life: Aerofex Hover Bike Flies the Mojave




As young boys, how often did we dream of speeding through our neighborhood like Luke Skywalker did in the forests of Endor on a speederbike? Probably way too often, at least in my case.
But now that dream may be one step closer to reality, thanks to the “Tandem-Duct Aerial Vehicle” fromAerofex.

The company isn’t going into mass production just yet, so put your checkbook away, but they envision these hoverbikes as a development platform for robotic drones for lifting and carrying cargo. Currently, the Aerofex machine is being tested at a top speed of 30 mph and a max height of 15 feet above the ground.

Follow along with their progress at the Aerofex Flight Log.

A Personal Weather Station for Your iPhone: Netatmo




Imagine having a mini personal weather station at your own house, one that allows you to monitor and track the outside temperature, humidity, air quality, and atmospheric pressure, right from your iPhone or iPad. Now imagine being able to also monitor and track the inside temperature, humidy, CO2 levels, and indoor air quality.
Well, you’re in luck, because if you’re weather-obsessed, meteorologically-inclined, or your daily activities depend on knowing the current conditions outside, the Netatmo Urban Weather Station is for you.
With two sleek aluminum sensor bodies – one for inside and one for outside – measuring the data, an iPhone/iPad app for viewing and sharing it, realtime air quality and weather alerts, and cloud data storage backing it all up, the Netatmo system can help you decide the best (and worst) times for watering the garden, going for a run, riding your bike to work, or making your kids go outside to play. The app also features a 7-day weather forecast, and for those who live in areas with plenty of noise pollution, the sensors also measure and track the sound levels (from 35 dB to 120 dB).

In addition, those who use Netatmo weather stations can also choose to help contribute to a wider community-based network of weather monitoring, so that scientists and meteorologists can further their understanding of the climate and weather in urban environments.
“The Netatmo Urban Weather Program aims to create the largest community based weather and Air Quality monitoring network ever established, offering a wealth of info to scientists and people living in urban environments…”

Roomba Turns 10, a DIY Autonomous Paintball Turret, and More at Tested.comRoomba Turns 10, a DIY Autonomous Paintball Turret, and More at Tested.com

deconstructed roomba prototype photo


When they’re not busting myths on the Discovery Channel, Jamie Hyneman and Adam Savage are busy cooking up great DIY projects and keeping up to date on the latest achievements of the world’s best makers.
Here’s some of the latest from Tested.com:
The Roomba Turns 10
Everyone’s favorite robo-floor cleaner is now 10 years old. Tested.com outlines the history of the home robot and the company that creates it, iRobot.
3D Printing at the World Maker Faire
Meanwhile, at World Maker Faire, Tested.com checks out a new 3D printer that uses stereolithography instead of extruded plastic filament to build highly detailed objects.
The Autonomous Sentry Gun
How cool is this? Project Sentry Gun is a homemade paintball and airsoft turret that uses open source software to track moving targets with a webcam and trigger arduino-connected servo motors to activate a homemade sentry. You’ve got to see it in action.
Talking With Makerbot Industries’ Bre Pettis
Finally, Tested.com talks with the co-founder of Makerbot Industries, Bre Pettis. He explains the improvements in the company’s latest 3D-printer.

Victorinox Unveils 1 Terabyte Solid State Drive in a Swiss Army Knife

swiss army usb slim 3.0

Image: Victorinox
The Swiss Army drive is ready for its update.
At CES, Victorinox announced two new products to its portable storage line: the Victorinox SSD and Victorinox Slim 3.0 USB drive. Both look like teeny flash drives. Both pack quite a bit more.
The company claims the drive is the world’s smallest high-capacity solid-state drive, ranging from 64 gigabytes to 1 terabyte. It has a 220 MB/second read and 150 MB/second write speeds with 256-bit AES encryption. The drive can also handle automatic backup and syncing. The drive is removable and can be outfitted with two included cases, a TSA friendly one and a signature Swiss Army one with all the bells (blade, scissors, nail file/screw driver). The Slim 3.0 USB drive has a capacity of up to 128 gigabytes and is up to 10 times faster than the its predecessor. Pricing for either product has not been announced.

Monday 3 December 2012

Samsung Debuts New Product Category: The Note is a Smartphone-Tablet Hybrid

samsung galaxy note


Image: Samsung
It had to happen. On Thursday, Samsung debuted a tablet-phone hybrid with the 5.3-inch Galaxy Note.
Samsung’s new product category, CNET reports, combines tablet-like functionality with smartphone features and portability.
The Note, with a 1.4-gigahertz dual-core processor, has a Super AMOLED touchscreen, which Samsung says is more vivid and brighter than standard hi-def displays. The screen — large for a smartphone, tiny for a tablet — makes is easy to view websites, books and documents, but overall the phone is pretty thin at 9.65 millimeters.
It runs on Android’s Gingerbread operating system, comes with a stylus (did we return to the ’90s?) and has both a 2-megapixel front camera and 8-megapixel rear camera. With 16-gigabyte and 32-gigabyte versions, the phone will also support the various 4G networks: one model will support HSPA+ and the other LTE. But details are scant on pricing and timing.

iPad Meets Antique Typewriter


Image: etsy/usbtypewriter
Is your iPad feeling a bit too modern for you?
Then attach a typewriter to it. An etsy member has hacked an antique typewriter to work as a USB keyboard for Macs, PCs and even iPads.
The typewriter’s keyboard includes all letters, numerals, punctuation marks, shift, space and a functional return carriage. Non-standard keys, such as function (eg. F1, F2), esc, ctrl are available with a special toggle key.
Image: etsy/usbtypewriter
The modification is very clean leaves the typewriter looking, feeling, and working like a regular typewriter — and yes, it still writes beautifully on paper. A beatiful, functional, unique addition to your home office.
The USB typewriter doesn’t require special software and also works with a number of tablets, including the Toshiba Thrive, Motorola Xoom and HP TouchPad.
Image: etsy/usbtypewriter

532 Million Status Updates, 864,000 Hours of Video: A Typical Day on the Internet (Infographic)





According to information I found on the Internet, back in 1993 the Internet carried only 1% of all information from two-way telecommunication. By 2007, more than 97% of that information was flowing through the Interwebs.
So what exactly does that translate to in real numbers? Since the Internet has proven to not only be the go-to choice for communication and information, but is also one of the fastest ways to become a billionaire, the guys over at MBA Online poured through the research to find out what we do on the InterGoogles on a typical day.
READ MORE: The Earth – and Its Average Inhabitant – at 7 Billion People (Infographic)
And the numbers are staggering. In 24 hours we consume enough information to fill 168 million DVDs, send enough emails to keep the post office busy for 2 years, write enough blog posts to fill Time magazine for 770 years, and upload 98 years worth of videos. Every. Single. Day. It’s a miracle we have enough time to do actual work.

Car-Building Robots with Laser Eyes Can “See” Exactly Where to Place Parts for Custom-Like Fit




New car building robots can "see" where to place parts (Photos: Ford)
Assembly line robots that are programmed to build cars by placing parts in exactly the same place every time are no longer tech cool. You know what is tech cool?  Assembly line robots with laser eyes that can see where parts need to go, adjust themselves to even the slightest variations in positioning, and custom fit each placement.
An army of these new “seeing” robots has been installed at Ford‘s Louisville Assembly Plant to install Instrument panels, windshields, roofs and fenders on the all-new Ford Escape, and they can adjust to any variations in positioning as each Escape rolls across the line to be fitted with its parts.
The machines are programmed to recognize any tiny deviation from specification such as gaps between door panels or between the windshield and the vehicle body.
“The ability of the machines to register any difference in each vehicle on the line improves our quality by providing a custom-like build,” said Thomas Burns, an engineer who works with the technology for the Escape. This results in things like door panels that fit tighter, reducing wind noise inside the cabin.
These new robots not only improve accuracy and deliver higher standards of build quality, but they save us humans from physical strain and injury due to repetitive motion. According to Marty Smets, an ergonomics engineer, “We also have a variety of semi-autonomous robots, which do tasks that aren’t safe for humans to do repetitively.”
A robot like the Instrumentation Panel Robot (that, not surprisingly, installs the instrumentation panel), performs a task that isn’t safe for humans to do repetitively, while also improving the build quality and maximizing gap seals for that part.
In the paint shop, 88 new robots reduce energy costs by more efficiently applying paint and sealer inside the body and to the exterior of the vehicle. Keeping humans out of the zones where the paint is applied reduces airflow and climate control requirements thereby saving energy and reducing carbon emissions.
Ford has more than 700 robots at the Louisville Assembly Plant assisting in the build of the body and interior of the all-new Escape. And as they begin to “see” and decide where to place parts, how long before humans are no longer needed on the line at all?
Not that I want anyone to lose their job, but I, for one, welcome our new robot overlords.

Sunday 2 December 2012

Flat Speaker is Thinner than a Credit Card (Photos)




Image: Hannes Harms
If you want a set of speakers to match your MacBook Air, then check out the thin boombox.
Measuring a half a millimeter thick (thinner than credit cards), the speaker design from Hannes Harms, a masters candidate at the Royal College of Art, uses sustainable manufacturing methods, design boomreports.
with acid-etching, the sheet of stainless steel is cut and engraved extremely precisely, allowing for 100% recyclability due to its extractive process. the shape of the product also allows for efficient shipping, enabling the use of envelope style packaging. once purchased, the user would assemble the speaker by bending the metal along pre-scored lines.

Image: Hannes Harms

Image: Hannes Harms

Image: Hannes Harms
Looks great, but how does it sound? No word yet, but judging by how puny it is, thin boombox probably can’t output the clearest and biggest audio. It is, however, great eye candy — and for some, that’s good enough.


Meet RUTH, the Touchy Feely Robot That Pokes Car Interiors For a Living (Video)




RUTH pokes and prods car interiors checking for comfort and quality (Photos: Ford Motor Company)
RUTH isn’t the ideal passenger. She’ll spend the entire time poking the seats, pushing all the buttons and flicking the air conditioner vents back and forth. She’s like a sugared-up 5-year-old, only instead of candy she’s powered by electrical wires, and instead of being annoying because she’s bored, she’s just doing her job.
RUTH is a robot. Her full name is the Robotized Unit for Tactility and Haptics. And she’s designed to tell car makers when the materials in their vehicles have just the right amount of softness, roughness, temperature, hardness and comfort that we as customers want. So earlier this year, Ford brought RUTH from Europe to their Michigan product development center to help them create cars with just the right amount of everything we want in a car’s interior materials.
See RUTH in action
“Quality” can be difficult to express, yet when we sit in a high-end car, we know by the feel of the trim and the touch of the buttons that the car is special and well-crafted. The sense of touch and the intuitive understanding of quality are innately human characteristics, but how do you measure them? How do you quantify something like seat comfort or a “satisfying” button push?
“Before RUTH, many engineers had access only to hand-held measuring tools, and no means to test the interiors in a manner that resembled in-vehicle scenarios,” says Luke Robinson, Ford metrologist and RUTH technician. “An engineer outside of our department might even have pushed a dictionary and a pop can into an armrest to measure its resistance and softness.”
RUTH and engineer Luke Robinson test a seat's comfort
Now, with this new technology, Ford has taken data from decades of worldwide consumer feedback and entered them into RUTH. Then RUTH takes her giant, 6-jointed, robotic arm and pokes the trims, turns the knobs, pushes the buttons and interacts with many of the vehicle’s interior areas in the same way a person would. She then “tells” the engineers which option is the best and finest, and Ford puts it into production. This allows Ford to tailor each vehicle interior to exactly what a customer group wants.
The result is the ability to put high-end products into cars faster, with less testing time, allowing them to be more affordable and within reach of a larger group of customers. And for that, we’ll put up with a little poking and prodding.

Apple's Contract-Free iPhone Could Benefit Every Consumer In America


Apple’s introduction of an unlocked and contract free iPhone 5 may be a big thing in the United States, but for the rest of the world it’s business as usual. But it might herald a change in the US market that will benefit consumer choice.iPhone 5: Bigger Screen Adds a 5th Row of Apps
Having consumers buy a subsidised phone on a two year contract has a lot of advantages for the network carrier, but having options in the pay as you go market, as well as SIM only deals and buying the hardware outright is something that is an accepted practice outside of the US.
In the run up to the launch of the iPhone 5 in the UK, SIM only networks such as GiffGaff saw their user base request the new nano-sim in preparation for the unlocked smartphone from Apple; pay as you go data plans in many countries are heavily tailored to data usage for smartphones; and there is very little to stop someone with a two year contract switching the SIM into another phone to see out the contract period. In America the carrier relationship is much more powerful. Handset costs are subsidised to a huge extent. Smartphones on sale for $50 are clearly not being sold at the true cost of production, but it’s the expected price. And if you want to end or switch a contract out, there is a high cost to pay.
By opening up the smartphone market in America with more options for pay as you go users, Apple could have a positive effect on the whole ecosystem. Arguably the press from the American media drives the stories that promote the ‘winning’ smartphones, and that concentrates the story on the carrier, rather than the Lumias, Galaxies, and iPhones of the world.
Just as manufacturers are looking to have people locked into ecosystems, there is a secondary  battle to own the customer. With a reliance on subsidised hardware, the relationship remains with the carrier.
This is where Apple could help the rest of hardware manufactures. Tim Cook’s company does its best to grab user details, both through the iTunes setup and the billing relationship required for app and media purchases. Microsoft are making similar moves with Windows Phone to direct people to register via a Windows ID and set up payment for the Windows Store, and Google has the requirement for a Google account and payment details to fully engage with Android.
All of these relationship require nothing more from the carriers. In essence they become little more than data pipes while the fun stuff happens between users and ecosystems.
Carriers would likely prefer this not to happen, and the two year contracts and subsidies ensure people will return to buy their handsets from them because for many in the US there is no other valid choice. The rest of the world knows differently and the carrier model sits alongside the contract-free option quite nicely.
Opting out of a restrictive carrier grip is a choice the hardware manufacturers would love for the consumers to have. Every little step helps, which is why Apple’s move to supply unlocked handsets should be applauded.

Portable mCAMLITE Turns Your iPhone Into a Versatile Video Camera




The mCAMLITE turns your iPhone into a top-level video camera (Images: Action Life Media)
Yes, you can use your iPhone as a more than decent video camera, but if you want to get better, more professional results, wrap it in an mCAMLITE.
Made from aircraft-grade billet aluminum, the mCAMLITE not only protects your iPhone when climbing on rocks to get the perfect angle, but it gives it the weight and heft you need to stabilize your hands whileshooting.
And because the pros don’t just use one standard lens when pushing for the perfect shot, the kit comes with two 37mm interchangeable lenses: a wide angle for capturing everything you want in the scene, and a macro when you want to get up close and personal. Together, they give you the chance to get shots that are downright impossible with the iPhone’s lens.
Since the best videos have sound, the mCAMLITE comes with a 180-degree external microphone, allowing you to capture directional sound and reduce ambient noise, so your YouTube fans can hear every note of your keyboard-playing cat…
The mCAMLITE’s housing is designed with consideration of your growth as an auteur. It has mounts on top and bottom for accessories and tripods, and has a cold shoe on top for pro quality mics and lights. They even offer a pair of action carts so you can slide your cam along to get smooth action shots. So as you get better and demand more from your cam, the mCAMLITE can oblige.
At only $159.95 it’s the perfect starter kit for any visionary filmmaker (or photographer), to add to their portfolio without spending a fortune. Don’t quote me on this, but I think this is how Scorsese got started…

Modular Keyboard Lets You Rearrange Keys to Your Liking




Image: red dot
Whether you’re a Dvorak diehard or a QWERTY fan, this modular keyboard will satisfy your typing needs.
The Puzzle Keyboard, a red dot award winner for design concept, uses rearrangeable keys to adjusts to users’ needs. For those who frequently use odd keys (such as F1-9) or program custom shortcut keys, this would allow them to layout a keyboard to their liking, in theory promoting typing efficiency.
Furthermore, the keyboard can be angled to adjust for ergonomics and wrist relief. But the possibilities don’t end there.
Furthermore, Puzzle Keyboard can provide efficient customised interaction with mobile devices, and could even be shaped like a remote control when the user is watching movies.

Jackets with Built-In Heating Let You Extend Your Cold Weather Golfing, Tailgating and Spectating




These jackets have a built-in heater with four temp settings (Photos: Mobile Warming Gear)
Just because it’s gotten colder outside it doesn’t mean you have to cut your golfing or tailgating short, or freeze your butt off supporting your team in the Frozen Tundra. Mobile Warming Gear has jackets and vests featuring built-in heating elements using technology originally pioneered by NASA during the early days of the space program, so you can crank up the heat when the temperature drops.
A system of unobtrusive micro-alloy heating elements built into the back and chest area are powered by a small, rechargeable lithium ion battery. A push-button switch lets you dial in the heat to your choice of four settings, depending on the conditions outside: 100%, that’ll bring the heat at 135 degrees, 75% for 120 degrees, 50% delivers 105 degrees and 25% will warm you to 90 degrees. Forget layering, you’d have to pile on a half dozen bulky layers to get you close to 135 degrees of chill-busting warmth.
But all that warmth comes at a price. A time price. The battery lasts about 2.5 hours at 100%, but when you dial it down to 25% you’ll get up to 10 hours of heat. So pace yourself.
For golfers who want to squeeze in a few late month rounds around the holidays, Mobile Warming Gear’s new waterproof collection of heated golf jackets are designed with performance and movement in mind. The jackets and vests are seam-sealed, USGA conforming and cut from ultra-lightweight and breathable technical polyester that’s waterproof to keep the rain and snow from shorting out the heaters, and your game. Featuring four-way stretch and golf-specific construction, the jackets provide exceptional freedom of movement without restricting layers.
Offered in both men’s and women’s styles the golf jackets are also windproof and feature waterproof pocket zippers, Velcro cuffs and a hem cinch cord for easy adjustment, and to keep the frost from blowing up your back. Because it’s hard to sink that 30-foot putt when you’re shivering.
$159.99-$219.99

Cocktails Would be Foolproof with this Shaker (Photos)




Image: Tatabi Studio
Enjoy a nice cocktail but clueless about how to make one?
Tatabi Studio’s Enkaja is a concept cocktail shaker that makes mixed drinks almost foolproof — almost being the operative word. There’s no telling what your choice ingredients are.
Image: Tatabi Studio
The shaker is made up of different building blocks: bases (such as mixers), spirits and touches (eg. bitters). After pouring in the different components, you compose the Enkaja, mix and pour. Sounds simple enough right?
Image: Tatabi Studio
Image: Tatabi Studio
The cocktail snobs among us might think this is too simplistic, but for those of us lacking an inner mixologist, this is a fuss-free way to bartend a small gathering at home. Too bad it’s just a concept for now though.

HyperJuice: How to Charge Your MacBook On the Go




Image: Alice Truong for Discovery Channel
These days, many companies have addressed the perpetually dying cell phone problem with battery packs. With USB output, these portable batteries — powered via wall outlets, the sun’s rays or a hand crank — can charge up most mobile devices.
Yet such a solution has been lacking for the laptop, another portable device that always manages to die at critical times. Whether you’re commuting on the train or watching movies on the plane, it’s always a frustrating process to be stranded without power, which is why the HyperJuice batteries for Apple devices — MacBooks included — is so useful.
The HyperJuice comes in four capacities varying from 60Wh to 222Wh, the last of which can power a MacBook for up to 45 hours or the iPhone 52 times over. Clad in aluminum to complement the MacBook, the HyperJuice includes four ports for charging (DC in) and discharging (DC out and two USB ports) along with a backlit screen that shows remaining battery life and the temperature the battery is running at. The company says the lithium-ion cells can be recharged up to 1,000 times and includes a built-in short circuit to prevent overcharging and overheating.
Still, despite its utility, there are two major drawbacks. The first is the setup. What you get out of the box is a battery and a strange connector. Though I initially thought the included adapter was for use with a car cigarette lighter, turns out it’s supposed to help you connect the HyerJuice to a MagSafe Airline Adapter, one that’s sold separately by Apple.
hyperjuice macbook battery
Image: HyperShop
There is another method to connect the battery to your computer, and that requires you to modify your existing MagSafe charger. Step one requires you to cut the cable of your charger, something I don’t expect most people will feel inclined to do, despite the following reassurance from the company: “Don’t worry. You will still be able to use your MacBook/MagSafe Power Adapter.” The full directions, which should take about five minutes to complete, are below:
1) Cut your MacBook/MagSafe Adapter’s cable.
Don’t worry. You will still be able to use your MacBook/MagSafe Power Adapter.
2) Attach Magic Boxes (Ed note: sold separately as part of the MagSafe Modification Kit) to your cut MagSafe Adapter’s cables.
3) Recharge your HyperJuice battery with modified MagSafe Adapter
4) Recharge your MacBook using your HyperJuice battery.
5) Recharge your MacBook with modified MagSafe Adapter
6) Recharge your MacBook with 12V auto power.
The second drawback is the cost. The entry-level HyperJuice begins at $169.96. The top-of-the-line model that can provide 45 hours of power to your MacBook? That’ll run you $449.95. That’s of course not including the additional airline adapter ($49) or the Magic Box mod kit ($49.95) — at least one of which is required to make this work with your MacBook.
Despite the steep price, there are plenty of professionals who are often on the road who will find this useful. By all means, if you have an expense account, go for it. But this might be out of the reach for the occasional flight or everyday commute on the train.

Wireless Speaker Bar Attaches to Your Gear, Goes Where You Go




Photos: Carbon Audio
There are an endless number of good wireless Bluetooth speaker options out there to choose from these days, and most are meant to sit on your desk behind your laptop or ride a shelf. And that’s fine, unless you want your laptop or tablet to do what it was designed to do, and go portable. Then you’re stuck juggling your device and a speaker (or two).
That’s why I like the new Zooka wireless speaker from Carbon Audio. A sound emitting tube made from medical grade silicone with 30mm drivers positioned on each end, the Zooka was conceived to also be a grip—a way to hold your music player while you listen.

Watch how the Zooka was created
The slit down the middle (or top or bottom, depending on what you’re attaching it to), lets the Zooka clamp onto your iPad or ride atop your laptop. A strategically placed notch keeps it from blocking your computer’s built-in video camera. Used with your iPad, it becomes a handle when taking your tablet with you, or use the pull-out “kickstand” hidden in the end to prop your screen up to the optimal viewing angle for watching movies and videos.
The placement of the speakers at the ends means you get a wide, room-filling sound field, and you won’t muffle the music with your mitts when using it as a portable grip. Which is good, since Zooka claims to play your music at 5 times the sound level your player is capable of. I tested one on my laptop, and the sound was deeper, richer and most definitely “louderer” (that’s how Zooka describes its sound), than the anemic stock speakers.
I did learn pretty quickly, that screen angle is essential to keeping the Zooka from tipping my laptop backwards. I’m tall and keep my screen angled back when I’m working. Not ideal for topping it with a speaker, even one weighing less than a dozen or so ounces. But standing the screen at a more upright angle isn’t a big deal when I’m getting this kind of sound. And sliding my iPad into it and watching movies is a whole different experience. I love that it can go anywhere, and not take up any more space than the iPad itself. And you style mavens will dig the choice of six colors.
Looks like the Zooka has a grip on what we’re looking for in a wireless speaker.
$99

Monday 12 November 2012

3D Technology Helps to Give a unique experience


Watching 3D movies has become a trend in the present time. There were 3D movies in the past also, but this style is much more prolific currently in the film world. There are dozens of 3D movies coming every year and people are very enthusiastic to watch them.
The 3D we observe in movies is quite different from the 3D we get to feel in video games or other computer-generated platforms of media. The latter just gives a virtual “feeling” of 3D using advanced rendering techniques of software. The former is also known as stereoscopic 3D. It is surely a more real thing and greatly catches the attention of everybody. It involves the aspects of real depth using the video capturing techniques which mimic the viewer’s eyes.
3D Technology
Many years back only very less people were fortunate to get the 3D TV technology to their homes. Now, the cost of this technology has gone down, and people are getting more and more eager to get the exciting 3D TV systems to their own houses.
You have three choices for 3D TVs meant for the home theatres. These are – plasma TV, auto stereoscopic 3D displays and projection-based 3D large screens. All these 3 systems have their distinctive features.
The projection based one gives a real cinema experience due to the big-screen effect. You can upgrade it to single DLP projectors which make use of Active 3D-based system. The plasma TV is a quite simple system that is very easy to set up. In auto stereoscopic the viewers do not require to don the 3D glasses as display screens make use of lenticular sheets.

Saturday 10 November 2012

30 Best Android apps this week

Xbox SmartGlass, Britannica Kids, Amazon Cloud Drive Photos, Snapchat, Calvin Harris, The xx and more

Xbox SmartGlass Android app

The Xbox SmartGlass Android app controls an Xbox 360 console
It's another bumper Best Apps post for new Android apps, covering 30 releases from the last week alone. Heady times for Google-powered devices.
The list doesn't include games, as they get their own separate post: this week's selection included Android titles like Need for Speed: Most Wanted, Theme Park, Hellfire, Zombie Driver THD, Chrono Trigger and Zombiewood.
iOS apps also get their own post, which can be found here this week. Windows Phone has a monthly roundup – the latest one is here. For now, here's the pick of the Google Play store from the last week.

Xbox SmartGlass (Free) 

Launched by Microsoft, this is an official companion app for its Xbox 360 console, enabling you to control the device from your Android smartphone – alas, not tablets for now. The app can control TV shows and films, music, web browsing and other features of the console, and in time will also be usable as a second screen for games.

Britannica Kids apps (£1.24 each) 

There are actually nine brand-new Britannica Kids apps available for Android. I'm including them as one entry. The nine apps cover the solar system, Aztec empire, dinosaurs, knights and castles, ancient Rome, snakes, rainforests, volcanoes and ancient Egypt. Their content is a mixture of text, images and interactivity, all aimed at children.

Amazon Cloud Drive Photos (Free) 

Amazon has extended its Cloud Drive storage service out with a new app focusing on photos. It offers 5GB of storage (for free) to store images in, and access them from Android devices as well as computers. It supports both phones and tablets, and can share to Facebook and email.

18 Months (Free) 

This is the official app for Calvin Harris' new album 18 Months, complete with a nifty feature to play every track in full. It requires some work though: dancing. Well, moving your Android smartphone, anyway: the idea is that by dancing (or waggling the handset) you keep the song playing. Fun and innovative.

Snapchat (Free) 

Snapchat bills itself as "the first real-time picture chatting app", and has been doing rather well on iOS, where its users have shared more than 1bn photos. The idea: send photos to friends with a built-in time limit up to 10 seconds. The photo then wipes itself off the recipient's handset. Ideal for sexting people you don't quite trust, but there must be a few other uses too.

The xx (Free) 

The xx have released a stylish app that lives up to their latest album Coexist, offering "HD Visualiser videos" for every track on the album for fans who own it digitally, as well as interactive artwork, news and notifications from the band, official music videos, lyrics and ticketing info.

Bamboo Paper (Free) 

This app is the work of Wacom, and is designed to work with its Bamboo Stylus accessory. Promising "note taking on your smartphone made easy", it involves scribbling sketches or writing notes which can then be flipped through. Made for Android smartphones, it (kind of) brings them the functionality seen in Samsung's Galaxy Note devices. The stylus costs around £25.

Rockford's Musical Audiobooks (Free / £2.99) 

And more numerical cheating here, since there are four Rockford's Musical Audiobook apps: chapters one to four of children's story Rockford's Rock Opera, with the first available for free, and the other three chapters costing £2.99 each. It's an audiobook with an hour of narrated story, as well as music and pictures. Read more on the aims behind it here.

Belkin MediaPlay (Free) 

Belkin's new Android app builds on the myTwonky technology, with the aim of helping you pipe films and music from your Android device to a connected TV (via its browser), or play content from your home library on your smartphone or tablet.

Game Reward Mobile App (Free) 

British games retailer Game has had some rough times in 2012, but apps are forming part of its comeback strategy. This ties into Game's loyalty programme, helping you earn points on purchases from the stores, while also offering recommendations. If you add your console gamertags, there may be other "cool stuff" in the future too.

Photo Warp+ (Free) 

More than 14m people have downloaded developer Tonuzaba Entertainment's first Photo Warp app, so this sequel should find a healthy audience. It's all about, yes, warping photos, with a range of effects to play merry havoc with images.

Find a Tradesman (Free) 

This is definitely one of the most useful apps in this week's lineup: released by the Rated People website, it helps you dig into its directory of tradesmen for home improvement jobs, posting what you need done and getting responses from companies or people who can help.

BB - Give Thanks (£2.47) 

The Berenstain Bears books have a firm following among several generations of Christian parents, and they're being digitised as apps by Oceanhouse Media book-by-book. This one focuses on Thanksgiving, with voice narration, audio and words highlighted as they're read out, to help early readers.

HotUKDeals – Official (Free) 

So called because there seem to be plenty of unofficial Android apps pulling down listings from the UK's deals'n'vouchers website. This is its official app, offering vouchers from the likes of Asda, Tesco, Domino's Pizza and Sainsbury's, filtered by location. You can also comment on the offers and tip those you find in the real world.

Insync for Android (£1.49) 

Insync's new app ties in to the Google Drive service, to access documents and other files stored in Google's cloud service, upload new ones, and share with friends and colleagues. All of which you can do in the official Google Drive service. Insync claims a host of additional features though, from exporting files to the SD card in your device, to saving folders for offline use, and streaming music or video files.

Antengo Classifieds - Tablet (Free) 

The native Android tablet apps are coming, as Google encourages developers to think harder about their larger-screened software. Antengo claims to be "reinventing classified listings" in the US, with more than 2m items in its classifieds directory, and an app designed for tablets.

Flip Launcher (Free) 

This is a smartphone app for power Android users who want to save a few precious seconds when navigating to and opening specific apps and shortcuts. The idea here: you flip to them, having set up to 24 as your designated flips.

The Montblanc Worldsecond (Free) 

Luxury watchmaker Montblanc is working on an interesting digital marketing campaign that aims to get people around the world taking photos at the same instant, then making them available to browse. This app helps you do that, with four Instagram-ish filters to apply, uploading pics to the Montblanc Worldsecond site, as well as (if you choose) to Facebook, Twitter and Google+.

Goalmaster | Goal Tracker (Free) 

This is a simple but potentially-useful app focused on tracking goals – of the personal motivation kind, rather than the football kind. You can create entries for your ambitions, then analyse your progress, and share your success (hopefully) on Facebook.
Jamie Oliver magazine
amie Oliver's digital magazine is available for iPhone and iPad
It's time for our weekly roundup of the best new iPhone and iPad appsreleased this week on Apple's App Store, and this one's a bumper selection.
As ever, the list doesn't include games, as they get their own separate post: this week's picks included iOS titles like Need for Speed: Most Wanted, Bubble Island, Hellfire, Gizmonauts and ARC Squadron.
Android apps get their own separate post, which can be found here. Windows Phone has a monthly roundup, with the latest edition found here.
On with this week's iOS apps!

Jamie Magazine (Free)

Celebri-chef Jamie Oliver has his own magazine, and now it's available on iOS as well as in print. Individual issues are sold for £2.99 or £3.99 via in-app purchases, or you can subscribe. Expect recipes galore, with the latest issue focusing on Christmas cooking.
iPhone / iPad

Onavo Count (Free)

Onavo has become an essential iPhone download thanks to its ability to compress the data you use, and thus eke out your monthly allowance further. Now the company behind it has a new app, which helps you understand which apps are sucking up data, breaking down usage over the month, with pretty graphs.
iPhone

Summly (Free)

Summly promises "pocket sized news for iPhone", trawling hundreds of news sites, pulling in articles from their RSS feeds, then turning them into 400-character summaries, which can be flipped through using a neat gestural interface. For more on the company behind it's intentions, read our interview.
iPhone

in:play (£1.49)

If you're pondering an alternative to the default iPhone music player, in:play is well worth a look. Not least because of its striking typography-focused design, gestural controls and some seriously nifty navigation to root through even the largest digital music collection.
iPhone

Brian Cox's Wonders of the Universe (£3.99)

Scientist Brian Cox's planetary app has been out for a while on iPad, but now publisher HarperCollins has released a native iPhone version too, boiling down its text, videos and photography to something that works well on smaller screens.
iPhone

HowDo (Free)

This is very neat: an app "to show you how to do stuff in the real world", with the tutorials coming from other people using the HowDo app. The idea being that you can shoot photos, associate up to eight-second sound recordings with them, and then share them with the community, following other users who seem knowledgable.
iPhone

Threadlife (Free)

Threadlife is picking up a fair bit of buzz this week, thanks to its aim to make "shooting video as easy as taking photos". That involves shooting three-second video clips, which are then "stitched" together into longer stories, or "threads", including your own videos and/or those of other users.
iPhone

Viz Profanisaurus Das Krapital £1.49

Dennis Publishing pleased fans of Viz with the launch of its Profanisaurus iPhone app earlier in 2012. Now there's an iPad version of the sweary dictionary, offering 12,000 definitions too rude to read to your grandparents.
iPad

Path (Free)

Social app Path has fervent fans, who love its status as a more private version of Facebook and other services. It's traditionally been a smartphone thing, but now it's available on iPad too, with bigger photos and film/music/book previews, as well as the ability to see your whole day's posts in an attractive landscape view. It makes very good use of the larger screen.
iPad

James Bond: 50 Years of Movie Posters

As cinemagoers get excited about the new Bond film Skyfall, there's an app from DK showcasing some of the poster art that promoted previous films. 105 posters are featured, with accompanying text from "Bond expert" (now that's a job worth having) Alastair Dougall.
iPhone / iPad

Wreck-It Ralph Storybook Deluxe (£4.99)

Talking of movies, Disney has launched an iOS book-app for its animated film Wreck-It Ralph, which tells the story for children with voice narration, animation, clips from the film and a racing game where kids get to build their own kart.
iPhone / iPad

Happy Places by Coca-Cola (Free)

This is pretty surprising: a photo-sharing app from Coca-Cola, with a clean and stylish design, and the ability to share shots out to Facebook or Twitter, as well as Coke's own Happy Places community. The question is whether this kind of branded app will tempt anyone away from Instagram, Facebook Camera, Path and other popular apps.
iPhone

Bubble Guppies: Animal School Day (£1.99)

There are a number of big entertainment companies getting into app-education (appducation?), with MTV the latest. Its new app aims to teach children about animals: what they're like, where they live, and what they eat. Rewards, a doghouse to decorate and the option to register up to four children separately with the app should be a hit with parents.
iPhone / iPad

LinkTV World News (Free)

iPad app LinkTV has a focus on international news, aggregating videos from broadcasters around the world tied to topical events, as well as text articles, documentaries and personalisation features.
iPad

18 Months (Free)

Calvin Harris has a new album out, and there's an app for that. And unusually, the app lets fans stream the album in full, with one caveat: they have to dance. A simple yet fun motion-detecting feature ensures that songs will play as long as the user is dancing – or at least moving the phone.
iPhone

The xx (Free)

The xx's last album Coexist has a very slinky iOS app that's just come out, offering high-definition videos for every song on the album, interactive artwork, and the promise of messages and news from the band, as well as ticketing details.
iPhone / iPad

Junior Astronaut - Breaking through the space barrier (Free)

This is another excellent education app for children, this time from UK firms Immediate Media and Crank Publishing. Aimed at 9-15 year-olds, it focuses on space travel: rockets, gravity and other topics, with a look and feel inspired by children's space books from the 1950s and 60s. It's free, with an in-app purchase of £3.99 unlocking the whole book-app.
iPad

Oakley Airwave (Free)

This one's for snow-sports fans, claiming to be "the perfect app to enhance your day on the mountain". It tracks your alpine stats, connects to friends and syncs with Oakley's new Airwave goggles' innovative heads-up display.
iPhone

Monogram (Free)

Described as "a shoppable magazine for your iPad", Monogram blends editorial with shopping links – "everything you can see, you can purchase". Like most fashion mags, really, but of course the key thing here is that the buying is built into the magazine. Monogram is a hint at how many of the more established fashion magazines will develop in their digital incarnations.
iPad

HuffPost Live (Free)

This is only available in the US for now, but it's an interesting sign of the way Huffington Post is developing: "a live-streaming video network that uses the most engaging stories on The Huffington Post as the jumping-off point for real-time conversations and commentary". The idea being that readers (viewers? users?) join in with the debates.
iPad

Beamr (Free)

Beamr sounds like a novelty at first, turning your photos into "a glossy-style magazine with a custom cover". But look closer, and there's a much better hook here: the ability to share photos at their original resolutions as shot on the iPhone, including the new panoramic shots. People you share them with can view, download and print the pics, too.
iPhone

Creatorverse (£2.99)

Linden Lab's main business is virtual world Second Life, but you won't see any 3D avatars in its new iPad app. Instead, this is a playful physics app that gets you to create... things, using joints, motors, forces, teleporters and other items. Then watch them in motion: "From the simplest bouncing ball to an elaborate pinball machine".
iPad

DJZ TxT (Free)

DJZ is a brand new website devoted to dance music (or, as the US would have it, "EDM"). It has just launched, with a spin-off app that isn't about presenting the site's content at all. Instead, it's a messaging app with the twist that you can include graphical "emojis" (emoticons) that act as beats and loops. "Every conversation is a new remix," notes the App Store listing. Which sounds silly, but it's actually enormous fun.
iPhone

Thoughtful Gift Finder (Free)

When you've finished making dubstep-scronk messages, how about thinking of someone else for a change? Thoughtful Gift Finder does exactly what its name implies: released by Notonthehighstreet.com, it's a way to research gifts for friends and family, based on some of their key characteristics. More than 60,000 products are covered.
iPhone

Sooty Paint (£1.99)

Sooty is 64 now, y'know. He's making his first appearance in an iPad app though, along with friends Sweep, Soo and Richard from his TV show. The app focuses on digital painting, with 20 pictures for children to colour in, and a blank canvas to come up with their own creations.
iPad

PC Pro Enhanced (Free)

Another app from Dennis Publishing, but this time with less swearing and more computers. A digital version of PC Pro magazine, it includes more photography and podcast snippets alongside kit reviews, as well as product comparison features. The app charges £9.99 a quarter for the digital issues.
iPad

HotUKDeals (Free)

British website HotUKDeals gathers discounts, deals and vouchers from a host of retailers and sites. Now it's got an app, which adds location into the mix to pinpoint nearby savings, while also letting you rate and comment on deals, or add those you've found yourself.
iPhone

First@Scene (Free)

This app comes from the Australian branch of St John Ambulance, and wants to help reduce road accident deaths and serious injuries, providing advice for anyone who finds themselves in a position to help after a car crash. Text, photos and revision questions all feature.
iPad

Trucks - Byron Barton (£0.69)

Byron Barton's Trucks book will be familiar to parents around the world: a colourful children's book covering trucks of all shapes and sizes. This is a digitised version of the book, with interactivity and features to help young (2-5) children practise their fledgling reading skills.
iPhone / iPad

Shatoetry (£1.99)

And last, something ridiculous: an official app from William Shatner in which the Star Trek veteran has recorded a host of words, which you can then string together into sentences to hear him say them. The idea being you compose poetry (sorry, "Shatisms" – one senses the developer hasn't tested the lingo on Brits), or create them with friends through the app's Game Center integration.
iPhone
That's our selection, but what new iOS apps have you been using this week? Make your recommendations in the comments section.

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