This article was published on March 31, 2014

15 of the best Android apps from March


15 of the best Android apps from March

It has been a good month for Android apps. So let’s take a look back at the pick of the new tools to hit Google Play over the past 31 days.

Dollarbird

Following its launch for iOS last July, Dollarbird finally brought its awesome personal expenses tracker to Android this month.

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Dollarbird is what you get when you cross a smart calendar app with a budgeting app, and helps you track and forecast all your spending.

Dollarbird

Tribesports

Tribesports for Android is a GPS fitness-tracking app that pretty much replicates its iOS counterpart, and if you’ve used any other similar app, it won’t take you long to get to grips with. You can log runs, cycles, workouts, and specific sports/classes, with real-time stats and progress graphs illustrating your endeavors.

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Do some dumbbell work before your run? Tribesports lets you log such data manually and in detail. You can choose from a ton of very specific activities (Box Jumps, anyone?), and save them to your favorites for easy access. You can also include the number of reps, add notes/photos and save it alongside all your runs, swims and cycles.

Moreover, there are thousands of workouts generated by the Tribesports community, so you can get actual instruction on numerous exercises and stretches.

Tribesports Training

QuizUp

Four months after it arrived for iOS, Icelandic startup Plain Vanilla Games officially launched QuizUp for Android users too, following a short invite-only beta period.

QuizUp follows the likes of Words With Friends by letting you pit your wits against buddies and strangers from around the world in a test of your knowledge.

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The Android incarnation pretty much replicates the iOS experience to the core, then there are no real surprises in here. QuizUp for Android notched up one million downloads in its first week alone.

QuizUp

CALCU

While the prospect of a new calculator app might not set your saliva glands into overdrive, it’s worth your while giving CALCU a shot, purely for its attention to design detail.

Launching initially with a default dark skin, CALCU lets you select from twelve themes, all underpinned by the same slick navigability and UX.

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The main part of the calculator is pretty standard, with the result of your sum appearing at the top, and keypad at the bottom. By swiping down, you can view the calculation history tape, while swiping up on the keyboard reveals additional keys, including scientific functions.

If you’re looking for a simple but good-looking, nice-to-use calculator app for Android, CALCU is worth your time.

CALCU

Timehop

Timehop, a popular service that ‘goes back in time’ to show you past posts on various social media sites, finally landed on Android this month.

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The Android app brings together your old photos and posts from your iPhone (if you have one), Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Foursquare, and replays them in the future to remind you of key events from your past.

Timehop

Link Bubble

Link Bubble is a new entrant to the mobile browser space having only launched a couple of weeks back, but we expect this to rack up a fair few fans moving forward.

The browser sits in the background waiting to ‘intercept’ as you click on links from any app on your phone. So, if you’re browsing your feed in the native Twitter Android app (for example) and you see a link to a photo on Instagram, Link Bubble will automatically start loading that in the background (when you click it), meaning you don’t have to sit starting at ‘redirect’ screens on your phone, be it a redirect to the Instagram app (if you have it installed) or Instagram on the Web.

The same goes for any links from Facebook, Airbnb, Evernote, Dropbox…basically any app.

Link Bubble [Free] | Link Bubble [Pro]

iSupr8

It was a long time coming, but iSupr8, the app for creating vintage-looking videos from your smartphone, finally arrived for Android this month.

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We say it’s been a long time coming because the iOS version launched way back in 2011, before Vine existed and before Instagram supported videos. iSupr8 lets you create retro classics and so so in 1080p HD, while you can choose from a range of film stocks that add a projector frame, flicker, grain, scratches, vignette, noise and film-burn to your video.

➤ iSupr8

Recordense

Recordense is a really nicely-designed audio-recording app that lets you mark and tag any part of a recording in real-time, and allocate a category to it.

During the recording process, you simply hit the ‘tag’ button and give it a name – for example, if you want to remember the location of a quote from a keynote speaker. Once the recording is complete, you can save it to a dedicated folder which you name, and also give its own unique color.

Now, in the Lite version of the app, you can only create two categories – for more, you’ll have to cough up two of your Earth (US) dollars to procure the full version. Also, you’ll only be able to use three tags per-recording in the Lite version.

Recordense Lite | Recordense [Full Version]

Coursera

Online learning company Coursera finally came to Android this month, shortly after it debuted its iOS app.

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Coursera for Android keeps students engaged with more than 600 courses, provided by more than 100 educational institutions, including Stanford and Yale.

Coursera

Photowall for Chromecast

Less than a week after Google launched its Chromecast streaming dongle outside the US, landing in 11 more countries, the Internet giant unveiled a brand new standalone app that lets you create a collaborative photo montage on your TV.

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Photowall for Chromecast is officially an ‘experiment’, one that lets anybody take a picture and send it to a Photowall on their big screen – photos can be added via the Web and iOS too. It then creates a YouTube video of this collaboration, which can be shared with everyone.

With this launch, Google is trying to encourage third-party developers to use its recently-opened Cast SDK.

Photowall for Chromecast

Auto Finder

Auto Finder automatically marks your location when it detects that your car has parked using your device’s built-in hardware – zero configuration is required.

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You can operate in satellite or map mode, and you are also able to manually mark a location if you wish. It also serves up directions back to your parking spot.

Auto Finder

Milk Music [US only]

Samsung took a big step into the music-streaming fray this month with a new service called Milk Music, available exclusively for Galaxy devices.

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Available in the US only for now, Samsung is shaking its leg in a very busy space that currently boasts the likes of Spotify, Rdio, Beats, and Pandora. Indeed, Milk Music is most similar to the latter of these examples, with its Slacker-powered, DMCA-compliant app letting you skip tracks up to six times in an hour for each station.

Milk Music

Fiverr

Fiverr took its Task Rabbit-rivaling app to Android this month.

To recap, Fiverr lets registered users monetize their skills and resources, which can be anything from Web design to gardening. The Android app, however, is all about browsing, ordering and messaging, rather than listing. If you’re looking to sell a service, you’ll still need to visit the website.

Fiverr

Wonder Timer

When it comes to timer apps on Android, there’s no shortage, but Wonder Timer is a simple and attractive alternative that packs a punch.

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Wonder Timer lets you set, save and control multiple timers, with single taps letting you initiate your ‘laundry’, ‘egg’, or ‘yoga’ clocks. These can all be reconfigured with names to suit your own endeavors, and there’s more than 200 icons to choose from.

➤ Wonder Timer

Newsbeat

American media behemoth The Tribune Company launched an interesting new service this month, one that lets you audio-stream text-based stories from online newspapers.

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The core raison d’être of Newsbeat is to “reimagine news for mobile”, using human voiceovers and text-to-speech technology. Newsbeat streams up to seven thousand stories each day from across the Web.

While it does have a US-centric content offering, it also serves up global news tidbits too, though you can’t indicate a specific country other than the US. You can also narrow things down to specific publications, topics, sports teams, and more. It works just like a standard media player – you can skip forward or back if you miss an audio snippet.

Newsbeat

If you’re on the hunt for more Android apps, check out some of the best ones from February, or put your feet up and peruse through the pick of the bunch from the whole of 2013. Alternatively, you can check out some of the best iOS apps from March too.

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