A Decade of Our Favourite Google Maps Screw-Ups
Some of the best deliberate (and non-deliberate) ways that Maps has been borked over the past decade.
Some of the best deliberate (and non-deliberate) ways that Maps has been borked over the past decade.
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You've had the same tired apps on your phone for ages now, give them a shake up and fill the gaps with these brilliant new apps for iOS, Android and Windows Phone.
Remember, never show this to Han Solo.
Dumping apps is part of the whole tech-writer cycle of download, test and delete. But some are harder to part ways with than others. What app is the last you'd delete off your phone?
If you track your fitness on your smartphone—and are serious about results—chances are pretty decent you've tried MyFitnessPal, MapMyFitness or Endomondo.
Swedish app NaturalCycles promises a hormone-free, non-invasive solution via your smartphone. But is it really a birth-control utopia?
Because at least robots won't get all uppity about sketchy loans and unfair wages.
As we forage full speed into February, here are the best thumb and finger distractors for the coming week.
According to the WSJ, you'll soon see cards in Google Now from Airbnb, Lyft, and "several dozen," other apps.
You'd think it didn't have a mobile OS all of its own.
Microsoft continues its mobile software push beyond Windows Phone.
There are plenty of apps for identifying music while you're listening to it, but you might not know that the same functionality is built into Google Now as well.
The app has continued to improve since its launch, and is now fantastic, especially for Android.
This video shows how unsettled people get when they realise exactly what they've been saying yes to on their phones.
Thirty-second clips now possible, for when Vine's six seconds aren't enough to address your public.