Android 2.3 Gingerbread Released

Nexus S - Google Phone

Nexus S - Google Phone

Android 2.3 Gingerbread Home Screen

Android 2.3 Gingerbread Home Screen

So Android 2.3 is being rolled out the next few days, and will be available on the Nexus One and the new Nexus S initially. It’s got some much needed UI tidying up (till HTC get to it), but here’s what else is cool in it:

Android 2.3 iPhone like Copy & Paste

Android 2.3 iPhone like Copy & Paste

iPhone-esque Select, Copy and Paste

You can now select a group of text easily without using the trackball.

Tapping on a single word also selects it.

Front Facing Camera support on Android 2.3

Front Facing Camera support on Android 2.3

Front Facing Camera

Sure lots of third party apps will support this, but I wonder if we’ll see a Google FaceTime competitor? They’ve got the infrastructure in place, so I’m sure it’s coming..

Near Field Communications on Android 2.3

Near Field Communications on Android 2.3

NFC– Near Field Communications

Think of this as QR codes without the aggravation of having to fire up the camera and waiting for focus. Expect these to be popping up everywhere over the next 12-18 months.

Other notables

  • ‘Overscroll’ – kinda like bounce scroll on iPhone, an effect to hint when you get to the beginning or end of a scrollable area
  • Support for ‘Extra Large’ Screens – hints at tablet support finally coming
  • Download Manager – universal across all apps, something iOS currently lacks
  • SIP Support – make phone calls over the web
  • Extended sensor support- gyroscope, rotation vector, linear acceleration, gravity, and barometer hardware now supported
  • VP8 and WebM- video codecs Google are pushing for HTML5 video

Here’s the official summary video:

Distimo- App Store Analytics

App Store App Counts (graph) - Increasing from 200,000 apps to 300,000

App Store Apps Increase from 200,000 to 300,000 published mobile apps

Distimo have released the October edition of their App Store Report revealing some interesting facts:

  • The number of applications in the Apple App Store has grown from just under 200,000 in April 2010 to over 300,000 in October 2010.
  • The average price of the top 100 paid applications in October 2010 is 171% higher in the Apple App Store for iPad than in the Apple App Store for iPhone; $5.80 compared with $2.14, respectively.
  • Angry Birds was the top paid application in both the Apple App Store for iPhone and Palm App Catalog in September 2010.

Get the full report

UI Guidelines for Common Mobile / Tablet Apps

Mobile Web Programming have a nice list of official UI guidelines for popular devices, which is pretty cool as I can’t stand apps that don’t follow the expected design patterns.

Have a look – UI Guidelines for mobile and tablet web app design

They’ve missed out the Windows Phone 7 UI Design and Interaction Guide