Thursday, February 7, 2013

The Best Android Applications

The Best andriod applications which i have come up with from millions: It is getting harder to narrow down the best Andriod apps with increasingly high number apps releases everyday, Find the best andriod apps below which you would love it on your phone.

Google Maps - Free
Whenever I ask people to name their five favorite Android apps, “Google something” almost always makes the list. Google Maps may be one of the most popular of the Android apps from Google. A few of its signature
features, such as navigation and layers, work better on Android than most other mobile operating systems.

Dolphin Browser HD - Free You can change this Android app’s look and feel through custom themes, add capability with Add-ons or even navigate by gesture.


Wikidroid for Wikipedia - Free
Wikidroid pulls articles from Wikipedia and optimizes their display for easy reading and searching from your mobile phone.

LastPass Password Mgr Premium - Free

LastPass manages and fills in your usernames and passwords for you automatically. You’ll only have to remember one password ever again: the one to get into LastPass, so make it strong.

Wheres My Droid - Free
If you’re prone to losing your phone, Wheres My Droid will put your mind at ease. The app helps people find their lost or stolen Androidphones by forcing it to ring at maximum volume or vibrate when the phone receives a text message containing a specified phrase, such as “Where’s my Droid?” The app can also tell you the phone’s location, as long as its GPS is enabled.

Dropbox - Free
Dropbox, the service that lets you store your files in the cloud and access them from anywhere you have a signal, fills that measure nicely with an Android app. It has a simple interface, easy uploading, and swift syncing across all accounts.

Astrid Task/Todo List - Free
Astrid has all of the features every list-maker needs, including due dates and alarms, and it also conveniently syncs with Google Tasks. unfortunately, it doesn't sync with Remember the Milk, although it used to.

Evernote
On an Android phone, Evernote works smoothly, looks great, and, most important, integrates with dozens of other apps and services. What I like best about Evernote is how it automates synchronization, a fail-safe measure in case you forget to put your files back in the cloud when you’re done working on them.

Documents To Go Full Version Key
Business users and tech-savvy professors (as well as serious students) need a document- editing and creation-application suite for their mobile devices, and Documents ToGo is the one worth buying if you have an Android phone.

Yelp - Free
Yelp turns out to be a pretty invaluable tool for finding businesses nearby, especially when you’re in a town you don’t know well.

Facebook for Android - Free
The Android app has the familiar, Facebook-branded interface, but it also offers some unique functionality that’s absent in Facebook’s iPhone app. This includes a side-scrolling preview pane of recently shared photos in the dashboard area. Very cool.

Twitter - Free
The best app for Twitter is Twitter. Twitter for Android adds support for multiple accounts as well as optional push notifications (alerts that appear on your phone similar to an alarm or incoming text message), two features that had been sorely lacking prior to this release. A clean user experience and smart design doesn’t hurt either. Best of all, if you don’t have a Twitter account and aren’t interested in joining, you can still use the app to search and read the site.

ooVoo Video Calls - Free
The Android video chat app supports group video, voice calls, and instant messaging—across iOS, OSX, Android and Windows! Not only do you get solid Android video calling, but you can practically video chat with anyone.

IMO Instant Messenger - Free
IMO Instant Messenger is by far one of the lesser offenders. Another reason it’s better than some others is it supports instant messaging across an impressive 11 networks: MSN, Yahoo!, AIM/ICQ, Google Talk, Myspace,Skype, Facebook, Jabber, imo, VKontakte, and Hyves.

Netflix
Netflix subscribers can watch any movie or television show from the instant streaming catalogue anywhere over a WiFi signal, as well as 3G and 4G connections. This ability to watch movies and TV shows anywhere makes the $7.99-per-month cost of a streaming-only Netflix subscription a little more worthwhile. The app requires Android 2.2 or later.

Movies - Free
Movies, by Flixster puts theater times, release dates for movies and DVDs, film reviews, and trailers in the palm of your hand. By default, the app pulls movie ratings from Rotten Tomatoes, although you can override this feature if perhaps you don’t think The 400 Blows deserves a 100-percent critics’ approval rating. You’d be wrong, but you can do it.

Angry Birds - Free
The franchise has dozens of titles, like Angry Birds Rio and Angry Birds Seasonal, but the original Angry Birds is the one to download to your Android phone first. (Also see The Best Free Android Games.)

Words with Friends Free - Free
The Scrabble-like game from Zynga, Words with Friends, is among the most popular mobile social games around. If you own an Android phone but your friends are on other devices, such as iPhones or iPads, you can still challenge them to head-to-head wordplay, as it doesn’t matter on which platform your opponents are playing.

Cut the Rope
Cut the Rope has players solving dynamic puzzles that sometimes feel more like obstacle courses. It’s a family-friendly game, the kind you definitely want to have preloaded on your phone.

Kindle - Free
Read books, magazines, and newspapers right on your Android phone without ever buying an e-reader. The Kindle app is by far the most popular reading app in the Android Marketplace because it gives you access to buy or download for free hundreds of thousands of books, and more than 100 different newspapers and magazines.

NOOK for Android by B&N - Free
NOOK and Kindle largely do the same thing (give you access to an impressive library of books, newspapers, magazines, and other things to read), although their interfaces and experiences are different. Whether you like Amazon or B&N is largely a matter of personal preference. The NOOK feels a little more graceful in its design, whereas the Kindle app looks more utilitarian.

Slacker Radio - Free
When we in the PCMag lab talk about music-streaming services, Editors’ Choice Slacker Radio always gets an extra nod. It serves up excellent audio quality, a well designed interface, tight lyrics implementation, and a load of customization options. Slacker doesn’t have niche stations or deep social networking features, but it’s still the music-streaming service to beat.

Pandora internet radio - Free
Pandora has very good quality streaming even over a 3G signal. Newcomers to the Android arena, including Slacker Radio and Spotify, are earning more and more marketshare every day, but Pandora tends to be the most reliable, likely because it has a longer history running on Android

FxCamera - Free
FxCamera adds filters and effects, like “toy” and fisheye lens, to enhance even modest pictures. It also helps to arm yourself with some additional tips for getting better photos from your phone.

ESPN Score Center - Free
ESPN’s free app lets you check the game quickly, and discreetly when necessary (with your phone under the dinner table, for example). Sports fans of all stripes will find this app useful; it covers more sports types than most other sports and news apps out there. It can pull game data from baseball, basketball, American football, the sport the rest of the world calls football (soccer), ice hockey, cricket, rugby, and more. For stat lovers, Score Mobile is a fine option, but only if it has the sport you follow, as it misses a few, like rugby and boxing.

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