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29 Nov 14:27

27 new and notable Android games from the last week (11/22/17 - 11/28/17)

by Matthew Sholtz

Welcome to the roundup of the best new Android games that went live in the Play Store or were spotted by us in the previous week or so.

Please wait for this page to load in full in order to see the widgets, which include ratings and pricing info.

Looking for the previous roundup editions? Find them here.

Games

Puzzle Fighter

Android Police coverage: Capcom's free-to-play 'Puzzle Fighter' is available on the Play Store

Capcom's free-to-play release of Puzzle Fighter is a mixed bag.

Read More

27 new and notable Android games from the last week (11/22/17 - 11/28/17) was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

28 Nov 17:40

Otherworldly nightscapes shot with spotlight-equipped drone

by Andrea James

The Dying Of The Light is a project shot by sfdrones.tv in the nighttime desert, but with a spotlight so bright that it reaches the intensity of daylight. (more…)

28 Nov 17:39

Watch: Thankful elephant salutes people who saved a baby elephant that was trapped in a ditch

by Carla Sinclair

A baby elephant is trapped in a ditch in Kerala, India until a group of people rescue it with an earth mover. Watch the magical moment when, after the baby elephant makes its way back to its family, who is waiting for it by a river, one of the adult elephants (its mother or father?) turns to the humans and twice gives them a thankful salute.

28 Nov 17:37

NVIDIA rolls out SHIELD Tablet upgrade 5.3 with KRACK fix

by Ryan Whitwam

You have to hand it to NVIDIA—it's kept the SHIELD Tablet updated for more than three years now. That's about three years longer than most Android tablets. Today, the SHIELD Tablet is getting the 5.3 upgrade, which includes a few little bug fixes along with one big fix for the KRACK vulnerability.

Here's the full changelog from NVIDIA.

  • Addresses Wi-Fi vulnerabilities (KRACK and Broadpwn)
  • Fixing connectivity issues with Zagg Bluetooth keyboards
  • Overall system stability and security optimizations
  • Update to Android Security Patch Level November 5, 2017

The software is still based on Android 7.0 Nougat, but it's now on the latest security patch level.

Read More

NVIDIA rolls out SHIELD Tablet upgrade 5.3 with KRACK fix was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

28 Nov 13:25

What texting app are you using?

by Joe Maring

When it comes to SMS messaging on Android, you've got options.

There's no denying the popularity of messaging apps like Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp, but sometimes, it's hard to beat old-fashioned texting.

The Google Play Store is filled with options upon options of SMS apps that you can use, and with so many to choose from, finding the one that's best for you can sometimes be a challenge. We already have a full guide outlining our favorites, but here's what some of our forum users are most happy with at the moment.

chanchan05
11-26-2017 07:06 PM

Android messenger has too few customization options for me. I hate the white interface especially since I'm using black themes. It's just off. I usually jump around between Textra and Yaata.

Reply
henryfool3
11-26-2017 08:02 PM

Textra has been my go to for years now. No matter what I try, I always come back to it. It's fast, bug free, customizable, and just plain works really well.

Reply
joeldf
11-26-2017 10:01 PM

I had been using the Samsung massaging app until a week ago when I tried Textra. Then I tried Yaata and the Android Messaging app. Yaata has a lot of customizations too, but I just like Textra better. Google's app is just too plain, plus it can't flash the notification LED on the S8 (of course, neither can Samsung's own app, for that matter), so Textra for me it is.

Reply
bobobo12
11-27-2017 08:59 PM

I use Textra and AA every day. It works great. On the phone, I use the Textra app. In the car, AA simply shows them as text messages--you don't see the Textra app itself on the screen in the car. But messages, contacts, etc are perfectly synced between Textra on the phone and AA in the car. It works beautifully--I can't imagine how this would be better.

Reply

We'd now like to pass the question on to you – What SMS app are you using right now?

Join the conversation in the forums!

28 Nov 01:52

14 new and notable Android apps and live wallpapers from the last two weeks (11/14/17 - 11/27/17)

by Matthew Sholtz

roundup_icon_largeWelcome to the roundup of the best new Android applications and live wallpapers that went live in the Play Store or were spotted by us in the previous week or so.

Please wait for this page to load in full in order to see the widgets, which include ratings and pricing info.

Looking for the previous roundup editions? Find them here.

Apps

Spotify for Artists

Android Police coverage: Spotify for Artists app is now available on Android [APK Download]

Spotify for Artists is a new app from Spotify that contains the artist dashboard from the mainline application and has had it moved into its very own app for easier use.

Read More

14 new and notable Android apps and live wallpapers from the last two weeks (11/14/17 - 11/27/17) was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

28 Nov 01:51

Best word games for Android

by Marc Lagace

Twist your tongue with these great word games for Android.

We've rounded up the best Android word games you'll find in the Google Play Store. These will test your puzzle-solving skills, trivia knowledge, and sheer reflexes. Quite a few have in-app purchases, but still offer plenty of free content on their own.

Ready to start working with letters? Check out our list of the best Android word games!

Words With Friends 2

Words With Friends is one of those classic games that practically everyone has played, so it only makes sense that, eventually, a sequel would be released.

So what's new with Words With Friends 2? Zynga has completely redesigned the look and feel of the game while also adding a bunch of cool new game modes. There's Solo Challenge which pits you against iconic literary figures controlled by the CPU, from Jane Austen to the master wordsmith himself William Shakespeare. Then there's Lightning Round which is a team-based mode where it's a race to get to 750 points. Each member of your team starts with their own board and you swap and add words to each other's board as fast as you can. Both of these modes seem to address the biggest gripe with the original game — waiting for your friend to finally play a word.

Its a substantial update to a beloved game that'll likely lead to a whole bunch of Facebook invitations to play from friends and family, and does good work to further differentiate Words With Friends from Scrabble.

Download: Words With Friends 2 (Free w/IAPs)

Wordament

Wordament is an online-only multiplayer game that lets you compete against other spellers across the globe. Swipe to connect letters diagonally, horizontally, and vertically in order to score points based on a word's rarity, determined by how often the word is found by the player-base. You can rotate the board to better see combination options, but the placement of letters does not change in relation to other letters.

Add an Xbox or Facebook account in order to keep track of your friends and progress as you move up the leaderboard. Ads are minimal — a refreshing for many gamers.

Download: Wordament (Free)

Heads Up!

Heads Up! is a really fun local multiplayer trivia game. One player holds a phone or tablet to their head showing a word, and a teammate gives hints as to what the word is (without saying it specifically, of course). A quick flip down of the device brings up a fresh word when guessed right, while a flip-up is a pass. After it's all done, you can watch a video replay taken from the device's front-facing camera and share it out with friends. There are six themed packs available out of the gate, and plenty more through in-app purchases of about a buck a pop.

You definitely need to give Heads Up! a try if you've been looking for something easy to play at parties.

Download: Heads Up! (Free w/IAPs)

Advertisement


4 Pics 1 Word

How good are you at word association? Put your brain to the test to find the right word in 4 Pics 1 Word.

This game gives your four pictures that are all connected by a common word. Can you figure it out? This is a great casual game that starts out pretty easy but gets progressively more difficult as you reach the higher levels. There are literally thousands of levels to play so you're never going to run out of puzzles. It's a great game to play by yourself or with a small group of friends. It gets your brain going — and is also filled with ads. But it's free!

Download: 4 Pics 1 Word (Free)

Snap Attack

SnapAttack is the classic Scrabble game with a twist. Instead of taking turns against opponents creating words one at a time, SnapAttack gives you 2.5 minutes, 7 letter tiles, and a board with two words already on it. Your job is to place the letter tiles on the board as words and rearrange them as many times as possible before your time is up. SnapAttack rewards points the same way as Scrabble: tiles are assigned a number, and the board has score multipliers in the form of double- or triple-word and letter scores.

Work your way up the global leaderboard by creating as many words as possible during each round. A new round will automatically begin, so expect to lose track of time. There doesn't seem to be any ads in this game, a nice change from the norm.

Download: Snap Attack (Free)

Wheel of Fortune Free Play

The classic word-guessing game show is available for mobile in the form of Wheel of Fortune Free Play. Featuring slick graphics and Pat Sajak himself, Wheel of Fortune Free Play is the official game of the beloved game show. Spin the wheel and solve the word puzzles, and then see if you can win the bonus round

You'll have to play for a while to level up and unlock new modes like head-to-head and Vanna's Showcase, and there are daily bonus rewards to keep you playing. If you love Wheel Of Fortune, you'll love the mobile game.

Download: Wheel of Fortune Free Play (Free)

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Your favorite word game?

Let us know in the comments below if we missed any of your favorite word games! If you'd like to see more great Android games, check out our roundup of the best Android games.

27 Nov 12:35

For the next year, TV, newspapers, and the web will run massive ads from tobacco companies admitting that their products kill people, that they were engineered to be addictive, and that they covered this up

by Cory Doctorow

https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=5&v=O8I39Yb2a_I

After losing their 19-year court battle with the US Department of Justice, tobacco giants Altria, R.J. Reynolds, Lorillard and Philip Morris USA are now beginning to run their court-ordered "corrective statements" as full-page newspaper ads, major web display ads, and primetime TV spots, containing frank admissions that they violated federal racketeering and fraud laws when they conspired to cover up the fact that their products killed their customers and that they intentionally designed their products to be as addictive as possible. (more…)

27 Nov 12:31

You Probably Don't Want to Read These

by Bill Crider
26 Nov 09:56

10 Incredible Facts About Ravens

by Bill Crider
25 Nov 00:56

Watch: Here's an easy way to make a fancy gift box

by Carla Sinclair

With just paper, a pencil, a saucer, some ribbon and glue, it looks like even the least crafty of us could make this pretty gift box.

22 Nov 18:44

Cops chase innocent shoplifting suspect into stranger's house, then storm it with 50-person SWAT team and blow up every room except one

by Cory Doctorow

Leo Lech is suing the police in Greenwood, Colorado for storming his house with a 50-person SWAT team because they mistakenly believed that a man who ran into his house (whom Lech didn't know) had shoplifted a shirt and two belts from Walmart; the police engaged in a 19-hour standoff that led to the near-total destruction of Lech's house due to the use of "calculated destruction," a tactic through which explosives are detonated through the house, room by room, to isolate the suspect. (more…)

22 Nov 18:43

Mom puts recorder in her daughter's backpack to record bullying, charged with felony

by Mark Frauenfelder

Sarah Sims of Norfolk, West Virginia said school officials did nothing to stop her 9-year-old daughter from being bullied at school. So she put a digital audio recorder in her daughter's backpack to catch the bullying. The school found the recorder and police charged Sims with felony use of device to intercept oral communication and misdemeanor contributing to the delinquency of a minor. She faces five years in prison on the felony charge.

From WishTV:

The recorder was found. The 9-year-old was moved to a new classroom and about a month later Sims was charged by police.

“I was mortified,” Sims said. “The next thing I know, I’m a felon. Felony charges and a misdemeanor when I’m trying to look out for my kid. What do you do?”

WAVY contacted Norfolk Schools and we were told because it is a pending investigation no one could comment on what happened. We were told that in elementary schools, no electronic devices are allowed.

“They aren’t making this about that classroom,” said Sims’ attorney Kristin Paulding. “[These] are charges that carry jail time.”

22 Nov 13:52

38 new and notable (and 1 WTF) Android games from the last week (11/15/17 - 11/21/17)

by Matthew Sholtz
multi-page article Page 1 Page 2

Welcome to the roundup of the best new Android games that went live in the Play Store or were spotted by us in the previous week or so.

Please wait for this page to load in full in order to see the widgets, which include ratings and pricing info.

Looking for the previous roundup editions? Find them here.

Games

White Night

Android Police coverage: [Hands-on] White Night, a compelling survival horror that uses a minimal color palette as its main mechanic

White Night offers something quite unique.

Read More

38 new and notable (and 1 WTF) Android games from the last week (11/15/17 - 11/21/17) was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

22 Nov 13:50

Google Play Store discounting apps, games, and more through November 27

by Joe Maring

In honor of Black Friday and Cyber Monday, the Google Play Store is running deals on apps, games, movies, and plenty more.

As you'd expect for this time of year, there's no shortage of deals to be found for the likes of smartphones, TVs, tablets, smartwatches, etc. The savings here are great, but these days, hardware is only as good as the software that's on it. Google recently announced a heap of discounts that are now available on the Play Store, and there's something here for just about everyone.

For apps and games, Google is slashing the prices on hundreds of applications throughout the entire Play Store – including a 50-percent discount on Colorfy's monthly subscription. You'll also be able to find savings up to 80-percent for the likes of Call of Duty: Black Ops Zombies, LEGO Ninjago: Shadow of Ronin, LEGO Jurassic World, and many others. Plus, if you're a Gardenscapes or Homescapes player, you'll have access to discounts on in-game items, power-ups, and even unlimited lives. These savings begin now, and they'll last through November 27.

Movie rental and comic book savings will only be available on November 25.

Music is an essential whether you're trying to relax or party with friends, and to help give your jams a nice boost, you'll be able to get four months of Google Play Music for free. Just like the apps and games, this deal is available now through November 27.

If you'd rather sit back and watch something, Google is offering 50-percent off any one movie and 25-percent off a television series that you buy. Along with this, you can also rent any single movie of your choosing for 99 cents. The deal for buying a movie or TV series goes into effect November 23, and the rental promotion will be available on November 25 only.

Lastly, if reading is more your thing, you'll be able to get a $5 credit towards any book you purchase that costs $5 or more. Many of the hottest titles will be discounted from their regular price, and comics revolving around some of your favorite superheroes will be available for just $5 or less. Savings on comics will only be available on November 25, but the book deals will be available from November 23 through the 27th.

If you want to browse through everything that's on sale, check out Google's Holiday Hub.

21 Nov 17:29

7 famous seafaring felines

by Bill Crider
21 Nov 17:28

Look at these cars sliding on the snowy streets of Vladivostok on Friday

by Mark Frauenfelder

Friction took a holiday in Vladivostok on Friday as cars slid and collided on the ice-covered streets. Vl.ru news has a collection of 19 videos highlighting the hazardous conditions.

21 Nov 14:55

Cat prison backpack

by Rob Beschizza

This portable cat prison (Amazon) fully incarcerates your feline friend and you can throw it on just like any other backpack.

From the product description:

Take your pet out to the ballgame, on a plane, or to the vet in your choice of colors and budget friendly designs. Small pets, such as cats and rabbits can be difficult to keep in carriers. Semi-sphere Design: semi-sphere can stop them from escaping and keeps them safe in your care.

Great tips in the Q&A section:

Question: What do i do if my animal needs to use the restroom Answer: Take the cat out

I did not photoshop a screaming kitten into the product image. That is the one they market it with.

20 Nov 19:18

UK government votes that animals are incapable of feeling emotion and pain

by Mark Frauenfelder

A majority of the UK's members of parliament somehow know that non-human animals are incapable feeling pain or experiencing emotions. I guess that means when you see an animal suffering, it's just faking it. From the UK's Independent:

MPs have voted to reject the inclusion of animal sentience – the admission that animals feel emotion and pain – into the EU Withdrawal Bill.

The move has been criticised by animal rights activists, who say the vote undermines environment secretary Michael Gove’s pledge to prioritise animal rights during Brexit.

The majority of animal welfare legislation comes from the EU. The UK Government is tasked with adopting EU laws directly after March 2019 but has dismissed animal sentience.

Image: Screenshot from Independent video

20 Nov 19:17

Google is once again Firefox’s default search engine as Mozilla terminates Yahoo deal

by Ben Schoon

Firefox Quantum brought a major update to Mozilla’s browser and it makes a lot of changes for the better. One of those changes is minor, but definitely an improvement — Google is once again the default search engine.

more…

20 Nov 19:13

Boaters stumble on massive Caribbean gyre of plastic garbage

by Andrea James

Nothing like going to a tropical dive spot known to be "untouched" by humans, only to find a giant plastic garbage patch stretching as far as the eye can see. The Doobie Brothers music adds a nice touch. (more…)

20 Nov 13:28

What email app are you using?

by Joe Maring

There are a lot of email apps to choose from, but these are the top ones our forum users recommend.

As popular as instant messaging services like WhatsApp and Facebook Messenger are, there will always be a time and place in which old-school email rains supreme. Email still has its place for both personal and professional use, and over the years we've seen a lot of really great email clients hit the scene.

One of our forum users recently announced that they were unsure of which one to download after moving from iOS to Android, and these are a few of the options that were recommended.

mschmiechen
11-19-2017 10:35 AM

I use BlackBerry HUB.

Reply
raqball
11-19-2017 10:55 AM

I just use the gmail app and add my external accounts there. Works great.

Reply
bhatech
11-19-2017 11:11 AM

I use Inbox for my personal gmail account and Outlook app for work office 365 email.

Reply
bkrickles
11-19-2017 02:23 PM

I have all 4 of my email accounts run through BlueMail and definitely no battery drain. All 4 pushing email with 1 account an exchange account. Very customizable and smooth. Definitely recommend

Reply

Now, we pass the question on to you – What's your favorite email app?

Join the conversation in the forums!

20 Nov 02:08

OnePlus is pushing out the first official Android Oreo build to the OnePlus 3 & 3T

by Justin Duino

When OnePlus announced its latest flagship this past week, it stated that Android Oreo wouldn’t be coming to the 5 or the 5T officially until 2018. While unfortunate, it seems as though owners of older OnePlus devices, the 3 and 3T, are receiving the first official build of Oreo starting today…

more…

18 Nov 22:37

20 classic games remade on Android with a modern design

by Matthew Sholtz

Alright everybody, it's now time for another Android gaming roundup. For today's list I will be concentrating on classic games that have been updated for modern mobile gaming. That means new graphics, new gameplay, or maybe just some good old fashioned tweaks to a timeless story that expands on its classic roots. So without further ado, let's dive on in!

Games

Lode Runner 1

To my surprise, NEXON is the company behind one of my favorite game releases this year, and it is offered for free without any in-app purchases or advertisements to boot.

Read More

20 classic games remade on Android with a modern design was written by the awesome team at Android Police.

17 Nov 20:34

Capybara invasion caught on camera

by Rob Beschizza

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p1Vb8SB2HJ0

I have no idea what the fellow is saying about this tribe of capybaras invading a warehouse in Brazil, I'm just glad that they did so and that he was there to record it for posterity.

17 Nov 15:13

I'm Sure You'll All Agree

by Bill Crider
17 Nov 15:10

How to Make Friends

No, wait, come back! I want to be friends at you!
16 Nov 22:07

'Bit Rot' explained: Why your phone is slower than when it was new

by Jerry Hildenbrand

Your phone was faster yesterday than it is today, and will be slower tomorrow. Bit Rot is a real thing.

Computers are kind of like people — as they age they tend to get a little slower and flaws are easier to see.

Our phones are computers shrunk down to be pocket-sized and easy to carry around. And that means as time goes by, things aren't happening as quickly as they used to or things can get a little buggy. This is universal; it happens to Galaxy phones and LG phones and Pixel phones and iPhones and every other phone that does more than make calls and send texts. Some people say they don't see it happening, and that's because of why it happens and the way software is written for all the different phones out in the wild. But it is still happening on your phone right now, and always will be.

Let's take a look at what is commonly known as "Bit Rot" and see if we can't understand things a little better.

What is Bit Rot, exactly?

It's a term that gets thrown around a lot by people who are into computers, and it basically means that the software is "old" and has become slower than it used to be. There are three things at play, and they're well documented even if they're not very easy to understand: Software Erosion, Software Entropy, and Software Bloat.

First, some outliers

Sometimes there can be other factors, too. Data Degradation and Feature Creep can cause programs and apps to slow down, but they're easier to explain and are a little different than what we call Bit Rot. Data Degradation is a fancy word that means your memory — either the RAM, the storage or both — is getting old. RAM and Solid State media require an electric charge and over time it can disperse more than it was designed to do. This means some of the stored bits (software bits) can be changed. When a few bits are wrong, many programs can compensate but that takes time and the programs are a little slower. When a lot of bits are wrong things pretty much stop working as intended.

Data degradation and feature creep can make your phone slower, too, but are different from Bit Rot.

Feature Creep is easy to understand. Your phone was built with a specific set of software in mind. When you get an update that adds more features, the hardware has to work harder and things get slower. Online forums are filled with people who hated a recent update on their Galaxy phone and people with older iPhones who hate the latest version of iOS. That's because the software was written with newer and more capable hardware in mind, just like the software your phone originally shipped with was. We all love new features and updates, but the old adage "be careful what you wish for" is right on the money here.

These issues can certainly have an effect, but they're different from Bit Rot and probably aren't contributing much towards any slowness on our phones because we don't keep them long enough to see it in action.

Software Erosion

Software Erosion is the slow but steady deterioration of performance that can happen to any software, whether it's something we use a lot or just a little. Or even never. This happens because we use the software and all applications change when they're used — we add user data to the base so that the software does what we want it to do. Note that this is different than software getting slow or buggy while we're using it a lot but goes back to normal with a restart. That's usually due to small errors accumulating over time or a memory leak. You can't fix Software Erosion by closing and re-opening an app or restarting your phone.

All software has bugs and all software needs regular maintenance it never gets.

There are two different types of Software Erosion, dormant and active. Dormant software erosion happens when a program or parts of a program you don't use stop working well because other things changed, and active erosion happens because of changes while you're using it. Both types happen because of a few different reasons.

  • Unused or leftover code can (and often does) contain bugs that don't get caught.

All software has bugs, no matter what a developer or user says. When a company changes some code there's a very good chance some of the original code is never going to be used but is still built into the final product. Bugs here aren't as likely to get caught and can have an immediate effect or one that takes a while to show up.

  • Changes because the software isn't user-friendly happen a lot.

A developer builds software with a specific idea of how we will use it, but once it gets into our hands we often don't use it that way! Sometimes this isn't our fault and software has a poorly implemented interface so we do things a developer never thought we would. Other times it is our fault and we do things like make multiple accounts or run multiple instances of an app or function that wasn't designed to run that way. This can leave user data or cached data that is more difficult for an app to process.

  • Lack of updates and maintenance are bad.

Any developer will tell you that the job isn't finished once the program is published, and software needs to be maintained. This means fixing bugs users find, but also frequent updates to work well with other software. Lack of regular maintenance across the board is the biggest cause of Software Erosion.

The "Android" that runs on your phone is actually a big group of independently running programs and services that need to communicate with each other constantly. An example: Facebook makes another change on their servers, then updates the app in Google Play. Your Contacts app ties into Facebook, so it might need an update. Or your camera gets an update but the gallery application that's tied to it doesn't. All the parts of the system need to work with all the other parts, and that means regular maintenance.

The good news here is that a lot of Software Erosion problems are fixed with a factory reset where all the user data is wiped. The bad news is that it all comes back eventually.

Software Entropy

All software that we can't change has bugs and unused code (see above). These bugs will probably stay unchanged over time, but can get worse as the complexity of software we can change increases. This is called Software Entropy.

The software you change affects the software you can't change because the system itself gets more complex.

Most of the software on your phone is in a closed system. You might be able to update the keyboard or camera app from the Play Store, but the bulk of the operating system is installed at the factory and only changed with a full system update. This is very different from all the apps, both factory-installed user apps and ones you installed yourself. The software you can change gets more complex over time and the software you can't change has to deal with it.

The people who wrote the software on your phone are pretty darn smart when it comes to all of this. But nobody can know the things we'll do, what new apps will be capable of doing, and how apps designed for one set of APIs (application programming interfaces), for instance, Samsung's APIs from their software development kit, will work with apps designed for another set of APIs, like the ones from Google that are part of Android. The developers have to do their best to guess and make the software in a way that won't break and hope for the best.

There are two ways to fight Software Entropy — regular software maintenance through timely updates, or resetting the user software back to the factory state.

Software Bloat

This isn't what the name suggests, though extra bloatware apps can and do cause things to run slower. Software Bloat when talking about Bit Rot means software that is filled with extra or unused features.

The more features added to any program, the more complex it will be. Complexity makes applications slower.

"Extra" features are impossible to define. Apps, or parts of apps, that I don't use are extraneous to me, but you might use and love them. From a computer's point of view, the only good application is one that does only one thing then closes itself once finished. This is impractical from a user point of view; imagine a keyboard app that closed after each letter was typed. The companies that make the phones we love have to find a happy medium between features and performance by using the right hardware or cutting back on features in apps. That could mean adding more RAM and using a faster processor or trimming features from an app, or both.

Another part of the "extra" features is software that has to be able to handle multiple (and often competing) standards. Your email applications are a great example of this. If you use Gmail and use the Gmail app, things are a lot more streamlined than they would be if you're using the other email app with a Gmail account, or an Exchange account, or something like a Yahoo! POP3 account. The Email app has to be able to do things the Gmail app can't, and has to be able to handle the different types of data we create. This takes time to process and as we add more data it takes more time.

Perhaps the best example of "extra" features and how they affect performance would be comparing Evernote and Google Keep. If you only use the app to take notes, all the extras in Evernote mean it takes a lot more time to add or read them. If you like those extra features, you'll quickly find that Google Keep just can't do most of them. There is no right or wrong here, but this does have a big impact on performance.

Unused "leftover" features can still run and cause problems, and our phones are filled with them.

Unused features are more frustrating because we don't know they are there and we couldn't do anything to change things if we did. When a company like LG (we'll pick on them here, but this applies to every company making phones, even Google) makes a phone with their own apps that are duplicates of "stock" android apps like the phone dialer or the calendar, there is a lot of leftover code that isn't being used. Some of the code still runs when you start your phone, too. We've talked about how this means bugs will be harder to find in that portion of code, but it also can have a big impact on performance. And when Software Entropy is factored in we see how those bugs can get worse and worse over time.

When you see silly arguments in comments about how a phone like the Moto G5 is faster than a Galaxy S8 with half the hardware power, Software Bloat is why.

So what does all this mean and what can I do about it?

That's an easy question — it means that some phones are slower than others and some phones get noticeably slower over time while others are less affected. And there's not really anything we can do about it.

More features mean slower software and more opportunity for Bit Rot to happen. It's a trade many gladly make.

Real talk — a phone like the Note 8 is noticeably slower (and shows it when attached to tools that monitor performance) than a Pixel 2. The Note 8 will get even slower six months or so down the road. But the Pixel 2 will never be able to do some of the things a Note 8 does, no matter how many apps we install or how we hack the crap out of it. I can annotate a screenshot with the S Pen immediately after I capture it on the Note 8, but on the Pixel 2, I have to share the screenshot to another device to annotate it with the same level of features and detail.

Like the Evernote vs. Google Keep argument above, what's better is largely a matter of features that you like. The Note 8 has all the features. This means it has all the bugs and software bloat that makes Bit Rot more noticeable. This could be a problem for you, but for others, it's not because there is no other way to get the feature-set. This is why there are more Android phones than just a Pixel and Pixel Plus and what everyone means when they say Android gives you a choice.

And when Bit Rot ever becomes enough of a problem that you need to do something about it, just factory reset your phone and take a few hours to set everything back up.

Questions?

Sound off in the comments below!

16 Nov 13:29

This timelapse of clouds in a valley looks like the ocean

by Andrea James

Lars Leber shot this timelapse of "low clouds over Colorado Springs and Manitou Springs. Cheyenne Mountain is visible in the background." (more…)

16 Nov 13:29

Real dog jealous of toy dog

by Mark Frauenfelder

This golden retriever tried not to appear upset while its human companion stroked a plush toy dog, but it eventually snapped, seizing the toy by the neck and slamming it repeatedly on the floor.

"Oh you think this is a game..."