Sprint has announced a new low-end Android device geared towards families on a budget. The ZTE Fury will only cost $19.99 after a $50 mail-in rebate and will have access to an array of friendly family apps (which unfortunately cost extra). You won’t find any jaw dropping specs but the Fury does feature:


If you’re into benchmarks, you may be interested in the latest results from the Intel powered Santa Clara set to hit France in June. We’re all curious to see how Intel’s new Medfield chips perform and whether or not they will shake up the mobile market as they claim they will. A German blogger recently took the Santa Clara for a spin through Rightware and Vellamo, both of which are browser benchmark tools. Rightware tests the browser’s performance in JavaScript and HTML rendering. The Intel chip performed quite nicely, scoring a 89180 which is slightly better than the iPhone 4S (87801) but still well under the Samsung Galaxy Nexus (98272).


According to some industry sources that spoke with DigiTimes, we could be seeing the mythical Google Nexus tablet as early as May. It’s reported that ASUS will be the one to manufacturer the 7″ low cost tablet after other potential partners didn’t quite make the cut. Apparently HTC and Acer were in the running, but after HTC’s unwillingness to to develop a low-price model and Acer’s lack of in-house R&D, ASUS was declared the winner. Considering ASUS’s recent dedication to Android and the tablet market, I would not be surprised at all if they end up manufacturing the Nexus tablet, in fact I expect it.


Are you an online shopaholic? Then you’re definitely going to want to check out the app Slice. Slice is the Swiss Army knife of online shopping organizers. All you have to do is give the service access to the email accounts (Gmail and Yahoo! only) where you receive your online receipts and watch as it magically organizes all your purchases. Slice will give you instant access to all the information you could ever want out of your online purchases. Easily view current and past purchases, keep track of how much money you’ve spent, see which items are on their way, and enjoy automatic tracking with push notifications, all without ever having to input a single tracking number.


When Google killed off the Android Market and replaced it with the Google Play Store, not every device was happy about it. In fact, some Motorola devices refused to link to the new Google Play Store in protest of Google’s heinous crime. Google acted fast and deployed the update police to force Motorola devices into submission. Thanks to the latest Google Play Store update 3.4.7, your Motorola app drawer store link will now work, forcing you to bust out that heartfelt eulogy you had prepared for the Android Market and say goodbye.

R.I.P Android Market

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