Thursday, April 11, 2013

MobileBurn.com

MobileBurn.com


Google Chrome Beta for Android adds full-screen browsing, tab history, and certificates

Posted: 10 Apr 2013 12:37 PM PDT

Google yesterday announced that the Apple iPhone and iPod touch can browse the web with full-screens when using Chrome for iOS, and the beta version of Chrome for Android today gained the same feature. Chrome Beta removes the toolbar as the user scrolls down and then it reappears when scrolling up. The update also adds support for easier search from the omnibus, client-side certificate support, and tab history when browsing on tablets. These features are in the testing ground of Chrome Beta and will likely appear in the standard Chrome Android app once Google manages to address stability issues with the current build. Download Chrome Beta
Read the full story here.

Foursquare 6.0 iPhone update renews focus on exploration rather than check-ins

Posted: 10 Apr 2013 09:37 AM PDT

Following the lead of recent changes to its Android app that downplays the check-in in favor of more recommendations and discovery, Foursquare has updated its iPhone app to place search and exploration at the forefront.
Read the full story here.

Android still doesn't have Vine, but Cinemagram has finally arrived

Posted: 10 Apr 2013 09:16 AM PDT

Though Twitter has made its short video-sharing app Vine available only on Apple iOS products, Cinemagram, a similar app that was once iPhone-only has made the jump to Android.
Read the full story here.

Burner brings disposable phone numbers to Android, adds new features to private calling and texting app

Posted: 10 Apr 2013 07:11 AM PDT

Cheap prepaid "burner" phones allow consumers to keep their conversations more private or discreet. Burner, a popular iPhone app that launched today on Android, provides the same service without having to get a new phone.
Read the full story here.

T-Mobile iPhone 5 will be $0 down with smartphone trade-in, but it may be foolish to take the offer

Posted: 10 Apr 2013 05:52 AM PDT

T-Mobile will employ a sales trick typically associated with car dealerships to attract new buyers for the long-awaited Apple device. Rather than charge customers an initial $99 down payment, T-Mobile will take used phones as a way to eliminate up-front costs.
Read the full story here.

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