Bejeweled 2$2.99Bejeweled 2 is a high-quality recreation of the classic match-three computer game, Bejeweled. The premise is very simple: match gems on a grid to get rid of them before they overwhelm your screen and you lose. It's highly addictive. The Android app incorporates crisp audio and visuals.
Bejeweled 2$2.99Bejeweled 2 is a high-quality recreation of the classic match-three computer game, Bejeweled. The premise is very simple: match gems on a grid to get rid of them before they overwhelm your screen and you lose. It's highly addictive. The Android app incorporates crisp audio and visuals.
Toshiba's Excite line of tablets sport some of the thinnest and lightest aluminum-clad designs available today. The Excite 7.7 ($499.99/16GB, $579.99/32GB direct) is the smallest in a family with 10- and 13-.3 inch models, and its design and features rival the high-end Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7 ($699.99, 3.5 stars). The Excite 7.7's Best Deal: at incredible AMOLED screen, fast quad-core Tegra 3 processor, and slim aluminum frame make it a tablet to talk about, but it's a tough sell in a 7-inch market where most tablets cost between $200 and $350.
Design, Features, and ScreenCompared with Toshiba's older Thrive 7 ($379.99, 3 stars), the Excite 7.7 is a work of art. The slate measures 8.1 by 5.3 by 0.31 inches (HWD) and weighs 12.3 ounces, putting it on par with the svelte Galaxy Tab 7.7, which measures 7.74 by 5.24 by 0.31 inches and weighs 12 ounces. The frame uses a combination of plastic for the outer rim and textured aluminum for the back plate. The result is a clean, modern look, with a sturdy feel for such a slim tablet. Along the top edge are the Power and Volume buttons, as well as an orientation lock switch. A 3.5mm headphone jack, microUSB port, and microSD card slot line the right side, while two speaker grilles flank the oversized proprietary dock connector along the bottom. Curiously, the oversized dock connector, which terminates in a USB plug, does not work for syncing to a computer—it only powers the tablet, while the microUSB port allows for data transfer between computers and external storage devices, but does not power the device.
Unlike the Galaxy Tab 7.7, the Excite connects to Bluetooth and Wi-Fi only, accessing 802.11b/g/n networks on the 2.4GHz band. There is a front-facing 1.3-megapixel camera and rear-facing 5-megapixel camera, but like mant tablet cameras, both are unsuitable for anything but casual snapshots. Pictures, even in good light, appeared washed out, with soft details in my tests. Video was even worse, especially indoors, with frame rates dropping as low as 9 frames per second and heavy image noise.
The real draw here is the incredibly vibrant AMOLED display—the same one used on the Galaxy Tab 7.7, but without Samsung's trademarked "Super" designation. The 7.7-inch, 1280-by-800-pixel display appears more saturated than on the New Apple iPad ($499, 4.5 stars), though Apple's tablet gets a bit brighter. The viewing angle is superb, but given the somewhat low maximum brightness and highly reflective screen, the Excite 7.7 is not a good outdoor performer. The 196 pixels per inch isn't quite "Retina" level, but it is still very sharp and the color richness can't be beat. The only problem I experienced was an overly sensitive auto-brightness setting, which became distracting as the screen brightness fluctuated too noticeably. If you manually set your brightness, this is not an issue.
Performance and SoftwareThe Excite 7.7 is powered by a speedy quad-core 1.3GHz Tegra 3 chip with 1GB RAM and either 16 or 32GB of internal storage (and a microSD slot accepts cards up to 64GB). With Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich on board, the Excite 7.7 zips along through pretty much any task you can throw at it. Games look superb, apps run flawlessly, and switching between multiple running apps caused no hang-ups or lag. The Excite 7.7 also breezed through our benchmarks, posting one of the top overall system scores we've seen and besting the Asus Transformer Pad TF300 ($379, 4 stars). As far as smaller screen tablets go, the Excite 7.7 is the fastest we've tested, easily outperforming the 1.4GHz Samsung Exynos-powered Galaxy Tab 7.7. As fast as the Excite 7.7 is, the Galaxy Tab 2 (7.0) ($249.99, 4 stars) delivers a comparably smooth Android 4.0 experience at half the price—though the Excite is better suited for graphically intensive games like Riptide GP.
Toshiba adds some apps to Android 4.0 but doesn't heavily re-skin the OS. You'll find the standard assortment of preloaded apps, including a suite of Toshiba-branded programs: Book Place, Media Player, and File Manager. Third-party apps include Amazon Kindle, Amazon MP3, Crackle, Netflix, and a collection of classic games like Solitaire and Hearts.
Media playback was solid in my tests. The tablet was able to handle H.264, MPEG4, WMV, DivX, and Xvid videos at up to 1080p resolution. For music, WMA, OGG, WAV, MP3, AAC, and FLAC files worked fine as well. There is also an audio-enhancement option that lets you employ various SRS effects, including wide surround, volume boost, voice clarity enhancement, and others. With the feature enabled, songs sounded a bit fuller and less tinny, but you still won't want to rely on your tablet for music playback.
Battery life isn't a bright spot: In our rundown test, which loops a video with screen brightness set to max and Wi-Fi on, the Excite 7.7 lasted just 4 hours and 46 minutes. The Galaxy Tab 7.7, with the same AMOLED screen, lasted 10 hours and 40 minutes in the same test. Granted, the Excite 7.7 has a more-power hungry Tegra 3 processor on board, but that battery performance isn't good for a small-screen tablet.
ConclusionsThe Toshiba Excite 7.7 manages to pack in most of the features of the even-more-expensive Galaxy Tab 7.7 for $200 less, although you lose the Tab's LTE radio and substantial battery life. That said, any 7-inch tablet priced at more than $350 is looking expensive nowadays. Both the Galaxy Tab 2 (7.0) and Amazon Kindle Fire ($199, 4 stars) will give you solid performance, polished interfaces, and access to largely the same selection of apps, although the Kindle Fire lacks access to the Google Play app market.
There is nothing wrong with the Excite 7.7; its thin and light aluminum construction, superb AMOLED screen, latest quad-core processor, and Android 4.0 make for a compelling package. But at $500, it runs up against the price of the entry-level Apple iPad, and the Excite 7.7 still can't match the iPad's vast selection of tablet-centric apps and Retina display.
You might not want to hear it, but those ubiquitous white earbuds that come bundled with your iPod just don't sound very good. The single best accessory upgrade you can buy for a new media player, smartphone, or tablet is a solid pair of headphones. With so many choices, ranging from $30 cans you can pick up at the local Best Buy to $1,000+ custom-audiologist-fit in-ear monitors, finding the right pair of headphones can be tough. But if you spend the time to pick the right pair, and you take good care of them, your headphones can easily outlive the device that's delivering your music. Whether you prefer padded over-the-ear headphones or snug in-canal earphones, we've got you covered with a quick look at some of the best we've tested in a variety of prices and types, including noise-cancelling, wireless, and gym-friendly pairs.
For in-depth headphone shopping advice, check out our comprehensive buying guide, and our headphone product guide for the latest reviews. For now, here are some of our favorite earphones and headphones.
Thanks to the wild popularity of iPods and iPhones, those trademark white Apple earbuds have become ubiquitous. Even so, earbuds are not an ideal listening option, since they don't enter your ear canal and as a result don't create a true seal. Thus, they're more likely to be placed at an odd angle, often destroying the balance of the audio mix—and you can forget about getting solid bass response. Earphones, on the other hand, sit further in your ear canal, creating an actual seal—and they're often more comfortable to wear, since they tend to stay in place better than earbuds. Headphones, by contrast, are over-the-head (or behind-the-head) speakers that don't enter your ear canals at all. Circumaural models create a seal with cups that surround your entire ear, whereas open, or supra-aural headphones sit directly on your ears without forming a seal.
Now let's take a look at how to find better alternatives to those lousy stock-issue earbuds. Since earphones have won the popularity war over other styles, we'll start with them, but we'll also explore headphones, including noise-canceling and wireless options.
EarphonesAs explained above, earbuds aren't the best way to get the most from your music. If you're looking for booming bass on a budget, reasonable quality starts to emerge in the $40-50 range. They don't deliver the most accurate sonic experience, but some feature deep, resonant low end—perfect for hip-hop and electronic music—which is a recent development in affordable earphones. Generally speaking, you won't find true audio quality in earphones until you pass the $50 mark. In the $50 to $150 price range, you can expect earphones that fit well, deliver powerful bass and crisp treble, and come with a variety of ear tips in different sizes to ensure a good seal. Ultimate Ears, Sennheiser, and Shure are consistently strong players in this category, but we've also seen promising affordable earphones from other competitors, like the $120 iBeats by Dr. Dre from Monster (Best Deal: $99.00 at JR.com)and the $100 Bose IE2 (Best Deal: $89.95 at Sweetwater).
If you're more about accuracy than booming bass, you'll want "flat-response" pairs that offer a more pure, less sculpted audio signal. The Etymotic ER-4S ($300) Best Deal: at is our flat-response earphone benchmark, and you'll find it in many of our HEAD Acoustics graphs as a comparison pair. In this same price range, you should expect well-matched left and right earphones, as well as better definition on the lowest and highest frequencies. Etymotic makes the flattest pair in this range, but there are plenty of options that offer more low-end without boosting too much.
Earphones can be far more expensive than a couple hundred dollars, however—the JH Audio JH16 Pro will cost you $1,150. They're a custom-molded pair with subwoofers added in each ear for more accurate deep bass response. They sound unbelievable, and do a great job of passively eliminating ambient noise around you (but at that price, they'd better!).
HeadphonesWhen it comes to consumer headphones, two companies in particular, Grado and Sennheiser, truly stand out from the crowd. Grado makes mostly supra-aural headphones that range from $70-$1,000. The Grado GS1000 pair, with its mix of supra-aural and circumaural design, delivers audio that sounds about as good as it possibly can. Even so, at $995 the GS1000 (Best Deal: $995.00 at Crutchfield)isn't for everyone: They're not very portable, and you can't ignore the wooden earpieces. Grado also has more affordable options, like the sub-$100 SR60 (Best Deal: $58.54 at Amazon Marketplace). We also liked the Klipsch Image ONE ($149.95, 4 stars) (Best Deal: $149.00 at Buydig.com). Generally, headphones should be able to reproduce richer low end since they have larger drivers than earphones and they don't rely on an in-ear seal to deliver sound. The $200 Denon AH-D1100 (Best Deal: $199.00 at Amazon Marketplace)is a more recent update to a similarly named, critically adored headphone pair. If you seek flat response with a bit of added bass, but not too much, it's a great pair to consider; they'll feed your hunger for deep bass and work nicely on the quieter songs as well.
Noise-Canceling HeadphonesYou might try to dismiss the din of the outside world by cranking up the volume, but the best solution for saving your sanity and your ears is to invest in a pair of noise-canceling headphones, so you can enjoy your audio at much lower volumes. The Bose QuietComfort 15 (Best Deal: $299.95 at Bose), our Editors' Choice, offer fantastic noise cancellation, and they sound pretty good—but they will set you back about $300. Meanwhile, Phiaton offers an excellent in-ear noise canceling pair, the Phiaton PS 20 NC (Best Deal: $129.00 at Amazon); at half the price as the Quiet Comfort 15, they're a steal. It's also important to note: noise-canceling headphones are generally not for audiophiles—they typically put noise cancellation before sound quality and tend to sound less compelling than similarly priced headphones without the noise-cancellation circuitry. Plus, several in-ear earphones offer substantial passive noise reduction by basically functioning as earplugs.
Wireless HeadphonesWireless headphones can be convenient in any situation where you don't want to deal with dangling cables—like the gym, for example. After years of poor-to-mediocre sound, Bluetooth wireless stereo audio has made great strides in sound quality over the past year. While the data signal containing Bluetooth audio is compressed, headphone and earphone manufacturers have found ways to enhance the signal to compensate for its deficiencies in a way that makes them less audible than before.
If you can't stand cords, check out wireless pairs like the Novero Tour ($79, 4 stars) Novero Tour Best Deal: at and the convertible Samsung Modus HM6450 ($99, 4 stars) (Best Deal: $59.99 at TigerDirect.com), both of which double as headsets to let you answer cell phone calls. For higher-quality wireless sound, Sennheiser announced the RS 220 at CES 2012; it uses DSSS, which is an improvement on Kleer's excellent RF-based wireless technology.
Before you settle on your perfect pair, check out our roundup of the Best Headphones, as well as all the latest reviews in the Headphones Product Guide.
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Xobni Corporation has been one of the more interesting players in the contact management space, indentifying where there needs to be more intersection between all the gadgets and apps we use. Smartr Contacts for Android (free), formerly called Xobni for Android, creates a comprehensive picture of your contacts. Xobni is the company that makes the app, and it has been a relatively big name in contact management. The free app, which requires a Xobni account (also free) gathers your contacts from Gmail or Outlook, and finds additional information about them, including headshots, from LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter, and meetings or text messages. Smartr Contacts also orders your connections by how often you communicate, rather than alphabetically, so the people you email most are always at the top and within easy reach. The app handily merges multiple emails for a single person into one entry, so if you have an outdated email address for someone, but she has uploaded the most recent one to another platform, Smartr can find it. Smartr Contacts won't delete old email addresses, but will add the new information when it's available.
Although I hit a few inconsistencies and had a lot of trouble logging back into the app once I had logged out, while it was up and running, Smartr for Android provides a lot of information about the people you know and how you communicate with them, succinctly and quickly.
System Requirements and Set UpSmartr Contacts for Android requires an Android phone running OS 2.1 or later. It also requires access to at least one of your accounts where you store contact information, preferably Gmail. To get the most out of the app, you'll also have to grant the app access to your LinkedIn, Twitter, and Facebook accounts.
Setting up the free app takes very little time; it walks you through the process in a minute or two. You'll be asked to create a Xobni account, and to authenticate other accounts you have (i.e., social networks) to let them and Smartr interact. As mentioned, I had some trouble logging back into Xobni after I had logged out, which I did by force—Smartr for Android always left me logged in by default. The reason I had logged out was to try and connect a second Facebook account, which I couldn't do upon set up, nor afterward from a settings page within the app. While you can't have more than one Facebook account, you can have multiple Gmail accounts.
FeaturesWhen you log into Xobni and launch the Smartr Contacts app, a home screen greets you with picture of people you know and a search bar front and center. Type anything in to the search bar—the first few letters of a first or last name, a company name—and Smartr will quickly grab some results. On the results page, the text you searched appears highlighted in the results.
Smartr Contacts shows its wits best once you select a contact. Each person has a page that shows:
details (phone numbers, email addresses, etc.),
social presence (the last update, or general information, from Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter),
history (a bar chart showing frequency of communication with the person over time, and a list of recent exchanges), and
common (other people who are often included on an email thread).
The history feature is a boon for professional networking. If you come across a contact you haven't spoken to in a while, it shows you exactly where you left off by listing the most recent communication directly below. It shows a clear synopsis of your relationship with the person.
If Smartr doesn't have an entry for a person in a particular social network, it leaves it blank, which is where I found some inconsistencies in the app. One person who is clearly connected with me on LinkedIn (as evidenced by the LinkedIn icon on his main headshot in the app) had no profile listing for LinkedIn. You always have the option to edit a contact, change the name, add email addresses and more phone numbers, if what's showing isn't complete, although you can't easily add them to a social network. For the person whose LinkedIn information was missing, I wanted Smartr to try and connect me to him in LinkedIn, hoping that once the app arrived at that network, it would see that we already were connected and perhaps fix the problem. But the app doesn't offer this function.
Click on a person's Facebook information, and when that app opens (still within the framework of Smartr), it shows the common connections you have with that person.
Smartr ResultsSmartr Contacts for Android works fast, finds people using intuitive search words, and becomes more useful the more you use it. But I ultimately see it as an all-of-nothing adoption. It's not the kind of app for dabblers. If you use your Android phone heavily for sending and receiving email, booking appointments, and generally doing business, whether it's professional business or personal, Smartr can offer a lot of information that you'll be happy to leverage.
When we first posted our list of the best Android gaming apps last year, we were grasping for straws. At the time, Android games simply weren't that great since developers were putting more thought into Apple iOS devices than in Android. Our original list of the best Android games looked more like a list of cheap knockoffs of popular iPhone games, like BitLetters Free (a Words With Friends knockoff) and Jewels (a Bejeweled wannabe).
But now that Android is the biggest smartphone OS in the world, and now that Android devices are rocking gorgeous displays and high-performance chips, we have a very different story to tell.
I *tried* not to let my affinity for free puzzle games shine through in this list, and sought the best of the best in arcade, casual, and tower defense categories. I'm not going to lie—there aren't many hardcore gaming apps that are polished enough to pull you away from your Xperia Play or PSP—but a few come close. Maybe next year.
To compile this list, I polled numerous friends, Facebook contacts, coworkers, readers, family, and spent a good chunk of money testing premium apps. You'll find a mix of paid and free games here; I generally stuck to freemium models for brainless games, and recommended paid versions for more sophisticated apps.
If you're looking for our favorite Android apps in other categories, like utility, communication, social media, and lifestyle, check out the 100 Best Android Apps. Of course, there are tons of other games out there, and I plan to expand this list. What games did I miss? If your favorite isn't on here, be sure to let me know in the comments so I can consider it for the next version of our Top Android Games list.
Note that you can either navigate this story by clicking through the slideshow or by reading it as a multipage story, via the next links or the table of contents, above. As always, feel free to make suggestions in the comments section. We read them all, promise.
New to the iPhone? Or maybe you're a veteran user trying to clean up your apps. Whatever the case, we all need a little guidance when it comes to figuring out which apps to install. The ten iPhone apps on this list are ones we recommend every iPhone owner download, install, and actually use.
Picking the ten most essential iPhone apps that everyone should have wasn't easy, especially considering there are dozens of excellent apps, and hundreds of very good ones. And beyond the most highly acclaimed apps are ones that fit different personality types or special interest groups. I for one am a huge fan of to-do list apps and language-learning apps, although I recognize that's not everyone's cup of tea. Also not included here are apps that come preinstalled on an iPhone—and many of those are indispensible—such as Maps, YouTube, Calendar, iTunes, and Reminders.
Each of the apps that made this list represents some slice of mobile computing or mobile entertainment that we feel should be utilized: productivity, organization, social networking and communication, reference, photography, reading, and so on.
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Eight out of ten apps that made this list are totally, 100 percent free. One costs less than $5. And one is free to download but requires a small subscription fee. Throughout the article, you'll find links to our full reviews of the apps when available, where you can often find tips on how to use the apps best, as well as any tiny snags we found in testing them.
You can find even more recommendations for iPhone apps through the links below. If you're an iPhone 4S owner, you might also be interested in the "10 Apps that Show Off the iPhone 4S" in terms of special features and capabilities. If you have suggestions for other essential apps, please do share them in the comments.