Android Leftovers

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Android Pay—Google’s second take on mobile payments—rolls out today
Today Google will begin rolling out its long-awaited Android Pay app—the second version of an NFC-based payment app that the company has launched.
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Google's Android Pay is launching today
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Android Pay, Google’s Apple Pay Rival, Arrives Today
Google’s new payments platform Android Pay, a rival to both Apple Pay and Samsung Pay, is starting to roll out, the company is announcing today. The system allows consumers to make purchases at point-of-sale using NFC technology, as well as pay for in-app purchases on Android devices.
At launch, the payments technology will work at millions of locations around the U.S., including big-name brands like Best Buy, McDonald’s, Macy’s, Walgreens, Subway, Whole Foods, Toys R Us, and more.
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The sad story of Amazon Video on Chromecast and Android TV
Neither Amazon nor Google will talk about the issue—and they didn’t answer my requests for comment—but evidence suggests a classic case of two rival companies who can’t get along, and are punishing users caught in the middle.
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Pokémon Go for iOS and Android brings Pokémon into the real world
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Specs Comparison: iPhone 6s and 6s Plus vs. the Best of Android
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Apple iPhone: New 12 megapixel camera still trails Android rivals
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Lollipop chews off 21% of Android devices
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Five Android apps to help you connect to network storage
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Android widgets may boost effectiveness of sleep-monitoring apps
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Android widgets work best for sleep app users
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Will iPhone Compatibility Spur Sales of Android Wear Devices?
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Can't Wait For Android Pay? Here's How To Use It On Your Smartphone Now
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WhatsApp 2.12.277 APK Download Available for Android – Google Drive and Bug Fixes
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today's howtos
| EasyOS 4.2.3 Released
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Review: The Murena One phone running /e/OS 1.0
Earlier this year the Murena team announced the release of version 1.0 their /e/OS mobile operating system. To accompany this new milestone, the project also announced two smartphones which will be sold with /e/OS pre-installed. These devices are the Murena Teracube 2e and the Murena One. These devices sell for about $330 USD and $370 USD, respectively. (These amounts were converted to USD from the Canadian prices at time of writing and may change over time.)
I currently own a Samsung S9 running /e/OS. I've had it for just over two years and it's been an unusually positive experience for a mobile device. The /e/OS platform is basically Android, but with the Google components, ads, and nag screens removed. The Google cloud services - storage, contact synchronization, and file sharing - have been swapped out in favour of Murena services. These services run on a custom, open source Nextcloud platform. It's a setup which I've found useful, convenient, and unusually trouble-free so far.
I asked the Murena team if I could test drive one of their new phones and they kindly sent me a Murena One. The package, a small black box, arrived containing the Murena One and some useful accessories. Along with the phone is a USB charge cable, a power adaptor which appears to work with both North American and (I believe) European outlets. There is a quick-start guide which explains how to insert a SIM card into the phone, go through the configuration screens and, optionally connect to the Murena cloud service. There is a small widget for opening the SIM bay, a couple of screen cleaning wipes, and a protective case for the phone. The phone, I was happy to note, had a full battery when it arrived.
| Black Box is a GTK4 Terminal App With Unique Look
Tired of the standard GNOME Terminal but cool on its successor Console? You’ll definitely want to check in with Black Box.
Black Box is a new GTK4 terminal emulator built in Vala and GTK4. The debutant release on Flathub has all of the core features you’d expect, plus a large dose of ones you might not. Yes, this app has a few innovative UI approaches that make it stand out from the (many) terminal apps already available for Linux desktops.
I do think of Black Box as the “eye candy terminal”. It may sound like contradiction given that CLIs are usually focused on raw function (and it may sound like a negative, but it’s not; things are allowed to look nice).
Thing is, Black Box isn’t afraid to be ‘beautiful’, as its immersive ‘headerbar-less’ mode proves. When enabled this gives every inch of the console’s canvas over to whatever command is running.
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