Android App Review: Google Reader

Before installing the official Google Reader app, I tried using the mobile browser interface for Google Reader (too cramped) and the My6Sense app (not as easy to use). I’m a hardcore user of Google Reader on the web (I’ve got nearly 900 feeds plugged in) and love to share some the gems that I find every day, so having the ability to chip away at that unread items list on my phone throughout the day is great. The sharing options are pretty much the same as on the web version (share and share with note). The send options are good too; I can pass along an item to Evernote (more on that app in a later post), Instafetch (more on that Instapaper knockoff app in a later post), Facebook, Twitter, email, etc.

Android App Review: Advanced Task Killer

I’m often amazed at how many apps are running in the background on my phone, sucking away precious memory. An easy way to see what’s running and selectively kill programs running in stealth mode is Advanced Task Killer. It also gives you quick access to any notifications (new email, new text, completion of any downloads or uploads, etc).

Android App Review: AppBrain

Last December, I finally gave up my ancient phone and got a Samsung Intercept that runs Android. I’ve been madly adding apps (and occasionally removing the ones that are better characterized as crapps). I thought that with this post, I’d begin writing up quickie reviews of the apps I’ve got, noting in particular those that might be interest to folks who work in libraries.

The first app I’d like to begin with is AppBrain, which improves on the default ways that Android lets you manage apps on your phone and the way your phone works with the Android Market. To get started with AppBrain, you’ll want to install the app on your phone first and then go to the AppBrain website and create an account there. What the website offers is a way to browse and search for Android apps, read reviews of them, and then record which ones you want to install on your phone. After you’ve selected an app in the AppBrain website that you want to add to your phone, you later go to the AppBrain app on your phone and sync it to the website account. After you sync it, you can then see an option in the AppBrain app to install that new app you just found. Being able to browse apps on the web is a much better experience than relying solely on the mobile interface in the Android Market app; being able to wishlist them for later installation is unique to AppBrain.

The other notable feature with AppBrain is that you can share your list of apps with the world if you’d like. This can be hugely useful if you’d like to show someone with a brand new Android phone all the apps you’ve got on your device that they might want to consider adding. Here is what is on my phone currently:

 

stephenfrancoeur’s Apps on the phone

Phone: Samsung Intercept
37 total, 36 free (97%), 1 paid (2%), 61MB total size, $2.74 total price

View this Android app list on AppBrain