June 14, 2021 by RSS Feed
pCloud has chosen a tough line of work. Pitching itself as the leading alternative to Dropbox, it’s in competition not only with that longstanding tech industry giant but with Google, Apple, and Microsoft, all of whom offer broadly the same service as pCloud for free.

That service, of course, is cloud storage. Google gives you 15GB, Microsoft gives you 5GB, and Apple gives you 5GB too. Dropbox, meanwhile, gives you just 2GB. So it’s great that pCloud stacks up favourably to these rivals.
It gives you a generous 10GB of free storage - though to unlock it all you need to jump through a few hoops.
And it comes with a range of reasonably priced paid options. At the time of writing an annual 500GB subscription is $47.88, down 20% from its advertised price of $59.88. A 2TB plan, meanwhile, is $95.88, down from $119.88.
There’s a 2TB family plan, too, and a business plan that comes with a free trial and bespoke pricing depending on the number of users. pCloud is accessible via a number of platforms. Our focus is the mobile app.

That service, of course, is cloud storage. Google gives you 15GB, Microsoft gives you 5GB, and Apple gives you 5GB too. Dropbox, meanwhile, gives you just 2GB. So it’s great that pCloud stacks up favourably to these rivals.
It gives you a generous 10GB of free storage - though to unlock it all you need to jump through a few hoops.
And it comes with a range of reasonably priced paid options. At the time of writing an annual 500GB subscription is $47.88, down 20% from its advertised price of $59.88. A 2TB plan, meanwhile, is $95.88, down from $119.88.
There’s a 2TB family plan, too, and a business plan that comes with a free trial and bespoke pricing depending on the number of users. pCloud is accessible via a number of platforms. Our focus is the mobile app.

One of pCloud’s main advantages over its competitors is the option to pay a flat, one-time fee for lifetime access. These are the most generously discounted rates, too, with a lifetime 500GB plan costing $175 and a 2TB costing $350.
The family plan, meanwhile, currently costs $500. That’s 2TB of storage for up to five users - or, to put it another way, $100 each for a lifetime of storage and other premium features. Not bad.
In most other respects, pCloud does exactly what you’d expect in a competent cloud storage service. Through a simple, unglamorous, no-fuss interface you can upload, store, access, and share anything from music to documents.
pCloud lets you either share password-protected links for collaborative access, or request files directly to a folder. It lets you backup your local folders to the cloud in real-time, too, including your camera roll, and you can backup from other clouds.
For media files, pCloud comes with its own media player, but you can also choose to open files in the software you have on your phone, as well as renaming, exporting, and so on. There’s a useful sorting mechanism where you can file music by name, artist, and album too.
While some tools, such as video editing, are not supported by pCloud, the app still provides these services as menu options and opens the relevant programs on your phone if you choose them.
Another of pCloud’s distinguishing features is its Crypto folder. This has nothing to do with cryptocurrency, but rather with encryption. If you’re a paying customer, you can upload your files to a Zero Knowledge encrypted platform.
pCloud also lets you access previous versions of files. By default you get 15 days’ worth with the free version and 30 with the paid one, but you can extend this period by up to a year for an additional fee. The desktop pCloud Drive also has a full suite of options such as syncing and backing up data, which compliments the app.

Inevitably, the biggest downside with pCloud is that it’s not OneDrive, iCloud, or Google Drive. This may seem like a facetious point, but the fact is that much of the appeal of these cloud storage solutions is that they integrate seamlessly with your software platform of choice. In terms of UI, it’s also a bit less elegant than its more established rivals, though no less functional.
Another mild irritation is that the mobile app is missing some useful bits of functionality, such as the ability to review file versions and upload items from your Google Drive. However pCloud has constantly been updated and upgraded since it was launched, so we’d imagine these nitpicks will be ironed out soon enough.
pCloud is a solid cloud storage solution in a sector dominated by absolute giants. Competition doesn’t come much bigger than Google, Apple, and Microsoft, not to mention established players like Dropbox.
To stand out, pCloud had to bring something new to the table, and it has. Its Crypto folder is a unique draw for anyone in search of an extra layer of privacy, while its generous free version, lifetime subscriptions, and attractive subscription prices make it a real competitor.
There are niggles, and for most casual users the cloud storage capacity and features they already have through their Google, Microsoft, and Apple accounts is likely to be more than enough.
But if you’re in the market for (a lot) more capacity, a lifetime subscription, and added privacy, pCloud might be the cloud for you. You can find the app on both the App Store and Google Play.
8.5
OVERALL
Lasting appeal 9
Does it well 9.2
iPhone Integration 8.5
User Interface 8
Is engaging 8
pCloud - Cloud Storage
PCLOUD LTD
Source link: http://appadvice.com/reviews
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June 11, 2021 by RSS Feed
Some games are supposed to consume your life, monopolising your consciousness and transporting you to parallel dimensions full of wonder and intrigue. Not Rickle.

Rickle sits at the exact opposite end of the spectrum. This hyper-casual mobile game involves making a pile of stones, and that’s about it.
Rickle is a tower-building game. It sees you trying to build the tallest stack that you can out of slabs that fly in from the left and right. To place these slabs on your tower you just need to tap the screen.
The aim is to place each slab flush with the one below, but Rickle is a game of attrition. Sooner or later you’ll falter, placing a slab too early or too late. This leaves an overhang, which gets chopped off, diminishing your tower and making the next placement harder.
You’re chasing two carrots in Rickle: your own high score, which is always displayed in the top-right of the screen, and the next world.
To help you keep each attempt alive you’ve got three consumable power-ups: one that automatically places a slab flush with the top of the tower, one that slows the incoming slabs down for a spell to make it easier for you to place them, and one that resets the incoming slabs to full size.
These power-ups are consumable but totally free. You buy more with the gems you earn through gameplay, and by watching videos. Rickle is refreshingly IAP-free.

While it’s not spectacular in technical terms, Rickle looks stylish and slick in an understated sort of way. It’s text-free, too, making it both universally accessible, if slightly confusing for the first few minutes.
And it’s a quietly addictive little casual game. There’s satisfaction to be found in building the highest tower you can and unlocking new worlds, though the dynamic shifts as you work your way through the game and the intervals between new worlds grow larger.
The number of points you need to unlock worlds increases exponentially, but the number of points you earn per attempt stays pretty much the same, creating ever-expanding deserts of progress where all you can do is inch forward one slab at a time.
In that sense, Rickle has more in common with Peter Molyneux’s Curiosity than, say, Rising Sushi - a fact underlined by the Sunflower Race that developer Polyworks Games is running this summer, which comes with a cash prize.
Outside the gameplay, Rickle lets you help make the world a slightly better place.
How? A portion of the revenue from Rickle goes to three environmental charities: the Natural Resources Defense Council, the Union of Concerned Scientists, and the Environmental Working Group.
We won’t give you the spiel on what these charities do, as you can find that info on Google in your own time. Suffice it to say that they all advocate for a safer, cleaner, more sustainable planet.

While we’re totally down with Rickle’s charitable mission, and we’re onboard with its distinctive gameplay arc that emphasises long-term progress over the usual smash-and-grab casual gaming hijinks, there’s no getting away from the fact that it can be a little bit bland.
Most tower-building games contain an element of physics. It’s fun to build a tower, but it’s more fun if that tower lists and teeters, and if misplaced blocks dangle perilously, like the bus in The Italian Job.
Plugging away at the goal of winning a race is what makes Rickle appealing after a while. The basic block-stacking mechanic is fine, but it’s a tad too monotonous to hold your interest for long. Fortunately updates seem to be on their way to help mix things up and keep you playing. You can check out the game for yourself via the App Store and Google Play, and there’s an official site as well.
Rickle is a decent casual game with solid presentation and an admirable philanthropic mission. It’s worth a look in a block-stacking genre that is perhaps a bit overcrowded.
8.0
OVERALL
Game Controls 8.1
Graphics 8.1
Sound/Music 8
Gameplay 8
Replayability 7.8
Rickle
Polyworks Games LLC
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May 04, 2021 by RSS Feed
Mango Languages is an incredibly capable mobile and browser solution for mastering the basics of a new language. With over 50 languages covered, the world is at your fingertips.
This comprehensive offering comes from Creative Empire LLC, and features vocabulary, spelling and conversational skills for over 50 different languages at very reasonable costs.
There’s a lot to love there, and, naturally, our iPhone app review of Mango Languages will let you know just what to look for.
Features: 




I don’t think we’ve ever seen a language app with as much raw language information along with a bona fide educational strategy tucked inside and at such an attractive price (free to download but ongoing training requires a subscription, more on this below).
Mango Languages gives users ample practice with vocabulary lessons, drills, repetitive audible pronunciation for each word, spelling and flashcard games to increase learning retention, and even an awesome visual representation of each word to help engrain them in your brain.
Along with using native speakers to insure you hear the proper pronunciation, there are also informational nuggets that help to understand the cultural setting in which the language exists.
There are well over 60 different languages to choose from with many offered with more than one “flavor”. Arabic, for example, is covered with 4 variations: Egyptian, Iraqi, Levantine, and Modern Standard. With Spanish you can opt for Castilian or Latin American.
By breaking words down in categories, it’s easy to practice commonly used terms with the app, such as conversational phrases, numbers or colors. It also features an extremely useful searchable dictionary, so if you’re ever in a language pinch this app could come to the rescue right quick.
There are also over 20 English courses for non-native speakers focused on the most popular non-English languages.
Functionality: 




For the first round of word learning and in-app quizzing, Mango Languages delivered admirably.
Each lesson takes you slowly from a point of competency that you left in the previous lesson to the next slightly higher degree of capability
We especially like how your language knowledge is reviewed in subsequent lessons. The design of the pedagogy never assumes that you remember everything from prior lessons. This is great since you may skip some days in between and need that bit of refresher.
The progression of vocabulary and grammar is easy, smooth and clearly well understood by the app developers to make learning your next language as easy as possible. But don’t be fooled into thinking that means it’s easy to learn a new language. It’s not. But the right program can help a lot.
Unfortunately, the lessons are not associated with a compendium of vocabulary words so you can easily drill what you’ve learned to date.
This feature is in beta and we hope it is fully released soon.
Overall Value: 




In our opinion Mango Languages is an awesome app for learning the basics and beyond of a new language.
This also applies to polishing existing skills, especially when it comes to spelling and writing in the new tongue.
Downloading Mango Languages costs nothing, nada, zip and you get to try your first lesson at no cost. That’s a heck of a deal, folks, especially when you consider the methodology and the enormous wealth of the information available via this app.
Mango Languages iPhone app requires iOS 12.0 or later and is compatible with iPhone, iPod touch and iPad.
Source link:https://www.theiphoneappreview.com/mango-languages-iphone-app-review/
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April 07, 2021 by RSS Feed
QR codes are useful coded images that can be scanned with your phone so you can access a wide variety of information quickly.
Unfortunately I don’t think people take advantage of them enough, mainly because it’s a fast way to zip to a website or read more information about a product without having to search for it.
However, finding a reliable app that allows you to process QR codes and barcodes quickly can be challenging.
CodeKit does a stunning job of making QR codes simple and easy for you. It not only allows you to scan QR codes out in the world, but you can generate them as well.
Concept and Functionality: 




Personally I feel like QR codes have fallen to the side, which is very unfortunate because I believe they’re incredibly practical and efficient. Similar to barcodes on products you buy, QR codes are unique and can be customized to great lengths.
To begin using the app you need to create a group. Once you’ve done so, you can quickly scan whatever QR codes you need to and CodeKit, developed by Zane Carter, automatically saves the scanned results in your history.
Perhaps the best part of this feature is that you don’t have to wait for scan animations or anything like that – the iPhone camera always stays awake so you can scan quickly.
Something I really like about CodeKit is the fact that it keeps track of what you’ve scanned in the past, kind of like the history feature on your internet browser.
The app even allows you to take things a step further by not only letting you use filters and flags while browsing your code generation history, but also by supporting deep linking and shortcuts.
Features: 




One of the things that really impressed me about CodeKit is the fact that you can use 21 different code generators in order to find what works for you.
This includes creating QR codes for email addresses, Wi-Fi network information, text messaging, web links, deep links, and even sharing your phone number. As I mentioned above, CodeKit allows you to create customized groups in order to keep things that you’ve scanned organized.
This is incredibly helpful if you tend to rely on QR codes because it’s very easy to get them confused and mixed up.
Value: 




CodeKit is available to download from the App Store for free, but you can choose to upgrade to the Pro version of the app via a 6 month, yearly, or lifetime subscription if you find it very useful.
The pro version allows you to create unlimited scanning groups, generate PDFs, access additional code generating features, and unlock a wide variety of other helpful tools.
Overall, CodeKit is a very helpful QR code app that definitely accomplishes what it was designed to do; help users generate and scan QR codes quickly and easily.
I definitely think this is an app that you should download and keep on your iPhone so you’re good to go the next time you want to scan a QR code.
CodeKit requires iOS 14.0 or later and is compatible with iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch.
Source link:https://www.theiphoneappreview.com/codekit-iphone-app-review/
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March 21, 2021 by RSS Feed
The beauty of having cellular data and/or Wi-Fi access with you wherever you go is the fact that you can communicate with anyone anywhere in the world.
With the Internet constantly at your fingertips, you have the entire world in the palm of your hand 24 hours a day.
And now, with Roblox by Roblox Corporation, users may utilize this convenience to connect with gamers and developers around the globe.
Roblox is enormously popular, with over 115M users as of Jan 2021, and has usurped Minecraft as the game-du-jour and as such it has attracted the interest of kids, and concern of parents, all over the world.
It isn’t a game as much as it is an environment. Essentially, kids create an avatar and can also easily create games that they then invite their friends to play as well as play games that others have created. They also wander around exploring and interacting with others in a virtual immersive 3D world. All of this is incredibly fun and addicting hence the enormous success of this app.
Players start out with a modest amount of game money so they can rent a house and get their online existence going. Outfitting your home requires real-world money, however, and it ain’t cheap.
It’s an incredibly well done environment and the whole experience is difficult to quickly describe since it is so varied.
No matter which game you decide to play, or if you just roam around exploring, the controls and visuals have been meticulously crafted to make the whole time you in the Roblox world quite enjoyable.
One game on the platform, Royale High, is a fantasy school role-playing and dress-up game that has been played over 5 billion times!
Since games on Roblox are typically played amongst existing friends, as well as new fast friends who get to know each other via their avatars, there is a good amount of pressure to keep upgrading various aspects of your online persona.
The other key to this game is the aforementioned ability to meet new players. This is done by wondering around and chatting it up with other avatars that you run into. The issue here is that the interactions are unmoderated and since you’re meeting an avatar, the actual person you’re talking to can be anyone of any gender and any age with any agenda.
Of course this is largely benign and the players have a great time but the costs and interactions are two areas where some oversight is needed.
It’s important to note that these issues are not peculiar to Roblox as all online connections tend to be anonymous and hidden costs add up fast with many games (did someone say Candy Crush?).
The good news here is that while some abuses are inevitable with a platform such as this, there are some privacy options. For example, parents can use controls that make sure younger players can only chat with their friends.
Overall Roblox is not only an incredibly well crafted gaming environment but it is also a glimpse of the future where more and more time is spent in virtual worlds and anyone can be not just a player, but also a creator.
Roblox requires iOS 13.0 or later and is compatible with iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch.
Source link:https://www.theiphoneappreview.com/roblox-iphone-game-review/
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