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archives

Android

This category contains 7 posts

Slices.Me slices and dices your Twitter stream for you

Slices.Me, from One Louder the makers of TweetCaster, is a new way to interact with and discover sources for Twitter. Continue reading

Echofon Heads to Android – Try the Public Beta Now!

Naan Studios is bringing Echofon, a popular iOS Twitter app, to Android! They recently tweeted a link to the first public beta for Echofon for Android. It looks 10xs better than the iOS version of the app. We’re glad to see the team go with Android’s holo-theme, a look inline with the latest versions of … Continue reading

TweetCaster – the upgrade rocks across mobile clients

TweetCaster steps up to become the multi-platform Twitter client to beat. Continue reading

Swift: An Android Twitter Client

Swift is the latest Twitter client to make its way to the Android platform. Swift packages every Twitter feature needed, and new tools such as Bit.ly url shortener into a stunning mobile UI. You can open links right inside of Swift, which also sports notifications for Twitter updates. Video and photo attachments are also supported.

TwitterRide – an ok Android client

TwitterRide is nothing like Twidroid that we profiled this morning.  The interface is simple, not fancy and the features are coming along. As you can see this is under development and I think has a single person working on it.  Quite impressive if so.  It is in the 1.x release cycle with new enhancements often.  … Continue reading

Twidroid – the premium Android client

Twidroid offers a full featured client for your Android phones.  The list of features was long and comprehensive and it appeared they were trying to make the most out of the integration with the native operating system.  Such things as you expect like GPS is there, with support for the local photo gallery and photo … Continue reading

Twitli – client for Android phones

I wondered when we would create this category, Twitli for Android based mobile devices.  One thing I immediately admired was how the developers at Twitli went for a simplistic initial user interface.  While the client has all of the features available (a few being tweaked), many are only available from a secondary menu to keep … Continue reading