Posts Tagged ‘News’

News Republic, the top-ranked personal news discovery app, hits all Smartphones and the Android tablets

Monday, December 26th, 2011


Bordeaux, France (PRWEB) May 17, 2011

News Republic, the best-rated news app on Android worldwide, is now available across all major Smartphone platforms including Blackberry, Nokia OVI, Samsung Bada. The WP7 edition will also be available soon.

News Republic has taken its open news for the end user approach to the Android tablets, bringing together content from various high quality sources and pairing it with its renowned TagNav

New iPhone and Android app: InterPartners Releases News App on the App Store and Android Market

Friday, November 19th, 2010


(PRWEB UK) 24 November 2011

InterPartners, the affiliate program behind the award-winning InterCasino, InterPoker and VIP Casino brands, has launched a content syndication mobile app for iPhones as well as Android phones.

Affiliates and publishers that follow the InterPartners.com articles and blog posts will already know that this affiliate program is committed to syndicating and providing quality content for casino, poker and gambling websites. With the introduction of the InterPartners News app this commitment is extended to providing affiliates with content on the go and at the tip of their fingers.

“We are proud to be the first casino affiliate program to develop and release a mobile tool for the iPhone and Adroid platforms. We tailored the app to aid gaming affiliates around the world with their SEO campaigns,” said Fotis Bachtsevanis, Head of Affiliates at InterPartners. “This is a free and value-adding application and frankly, anyone that runs an affiliate business within the gaming industry should have it on their phones.”

The InterPartners team consists of experts in different fields, from digital marketing, advertising, content and SEO to CRM, data-analysis and brand placement. Whether affiliates are just starting out, or already Super Affiliates, there is always something the InterPartners team can help with.

The InterPartners News app is available at the Apple App Store as well as the Android Market, and can also be found by visiting the InterPartners website where affiliates can also register and receive up to 50% in revenue share.

CONTACT INFORMATION

Fotis Bachtsevanis

Head of Affiliates

support(at)interpartners(dot)com

About InterPartners:

InterPartners is the affiliate network for the award-winning premium online gaming brands, InterCasino, InterPoker and VIP Casino. Some of these brands date back to the very beginning of online casino gaming. In the past 10 years, Interpartners has paid in excess of 70 million dollars in affiliate commissions to more than 4,000 affiliates. InterPartners offers the kind of peace of mind that comes with when dealing with a highly-respected and well-established affiliate marketing scheme.

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Motorola, HTC and BlackBerry Have News Models-myluxphone

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

Have you ever notice that many common common wisdoms actually contradict each other? However, haste makes waste, that is the early bird gets the worm. In fact there is no second acts in american people’s lives, but if you at first do not succeed, try,try again. This is a matter of the three- Motorola, HTC Mobile Phone, BlackBerry.

The “try, try again” part is definitely what the Motorola, HTC Replica and BlackBerry people are up to. One year ago, when it comes into the iPhone era , each of these three companies stumbled publicly.

The BlackBerry is the first touch-screen phone but it’s buggy, sluggish, counterintuitive mess. The T-Mobile G1, made by HTC mobile phone, was the first phone that ran Google’s new Android operating system, but the phone itself was chunky and clunky. And Motorola, well, it’s been looking for a hit ever since the Razr phone.

All three are back with much more impressive, much more refined new phones. None is as thin, attractive or flexible as the iPhone, but hey — maybe you don’t want an iPhone. Maybe there’s no AT&T coverage where you live, or you want a swappable battery, or you just hate the thought of running with the hypey herd. In that case, a new BlackBerry Storm 2, Replica HTC Phone Hero or Motorola Cliq might be a perfectly alternative.

All have cameras, video recording, GPS, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, five or six hours of talk time and standard headphone jacks. But that doesn’t mean they’re all the same. Here’s how they shake out.

BlackBerry Storm 2

if there was one thing last year’s Storm made clear, it’s this: you don’t rush a product to market just because it’s the holiday season. That’s what R.I.M. did last year, and the Storm was a mess. You’d tap one menu item, and a different one would highlight. You’d flick a list of phone numbers, and it’d stop scrolling the instant your finger stopped (i.e., no momentum). You’d turn the phone 90 degrees, and wait till your next birthday for the image to rotate.

The Storm 2 fixes all of that ($180 from Verizon, with contract, after rebate). Bugs are out, list momentum is in, screen rotation is instantaneous.

The original Storm’s big gimmick was that the entire screen was clickable, like a mouse button — but it wound up requiring too much effort to press the on-screen keys, like a manual typewriter. The Storm 2’s redesigned clickable screen requires far less effort and no longer leaves alarming gaps around its edges; magically enough, it also loses its clickiness when you’re on a call or the phone is off.

The Storm 2 can now exploit the speed of Wi-Fi wireless Internet hot spots, and boasts an impeccable checklist of goodies: autofocus camera, voice dialing, memory-card slot (a 16-gigabyte card is included) and so on. It even works overseas (for added cost, of course), thanks to a slot for a GSM account card (the network type most countries use).

I still don’t get the point of the clicky screen, though. It still has dual feedback mechanisms — colored highlighting on the screen means one thing, a click means something else — that often clash. For example, every time you swipe to scroll a list, your finger highlights the list item it first touched, alarmingly.

Typing is faster on this screen, because you don’t have to fully lift Finger A before pushing down with Finger B (using the Shift key is especially improved for this reason). But it’s still not a true multitouch-screen, and using the Web browser is still slow and fumbly. Isn’t the Web browser the primary point of an all-screen phone? Otherwise, why not get a regular BlackBerry?

The Storm 2 will make many more people happy than the original Storm, but try it in a Verizon store before you buy; the clicky-screen bit isn’t for everyone.

Motorola Cliq

Social networkers, you may have just found your phone.

Motorola’s big-deal new phone ($200 from T-Mobile with contract) is the only one here with a slide-out keyboard. But atop Google’s Android phone software, Motorola has built an ingenious, if initially overwhelming, archipelago of social-networking “widgets” (little floating windows). Each reports the latest from Twitter, Facebook and MySpace, with incoming text messages and e-mail notes — all on the Home screen. In one place, you get a complete picture of your online social network and can post your own updates, too.

Similarly, the address book fills itself with information and headshots from those online worlds, and the awesomely powerful History tab shows you a complete list of recent communications with each person: text messages, calls, e-mail and so on. (It’s therefore simple to contact that person using any of these channels.)

And when someone calls, you see not only his photo, but also his latest status broadcasts from Twitter and Facebook. At the least, this display provides a built-in conversation starter; at best, you have advance warning about your caller’s mood.

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