Five to Try: Everalbum is a photographer’s best friend, Circa Infinity is a dizzying delight

BY GreenBot Staff

Published 19 Feb 2016

Samsung will debut their new phones by the end of the weekend, but if you need some fresh apps games for your current Android device, look no further. Our latest Five to Try entry is led by Everalbum, a popular cloud-based tool for storing presenting your digital photos videos, it’s joined by MyShake, which turns your phone into an on-the-go earthquake detector.

If it’s games you’re after, Circa Infinity is a stout this week, delivering strange exciting circular platform challenges, while Dub Dash is a pulse-pounding rhythm affair. And if you don’t already have enough of the Kardashian family in your life, lo behold, Glu’s Kendall & Kylie is here to save the day. Grab some fresh apps have a little phone-based fun this weekend.

Everalbum

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Everalbum automatically backs up your media to the cloud— then helps you clear the local versions to save space.

Got a lot of photos videos on your phone? Better yet, got a bunch of photos videos all over the place? Everalbum might be able to help. After topping the charts on iOS, it’s now available on Android to not only back up curate your phone footage, but also centralize store images you might have hanging around in other services cloud receptacles.

ke otos, Everalbum provides unlimited free storage for high-res versions of photos, it can automatically back up mobile images videos tell you how much storage you’ll save by deleting the local versions. Once in the cloud, they’re easily accessible through the app, which lets you create albums share with friends. You’ll need to pay $10/month to store full-resolution photos unlimited HD videos, but most users should get a lot of mileage out of the free, basic service.

Circa Infinity

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You’ll leap into circle after circle, all while dodging the demonic creepers inside.

Do traditional 2D platform games leave you feeling… well, flat? Maybe Circa Infinity ($3) is just the kind of genre spin you need, as it takes running jumping to new places. This minimal indie game takes place entirely within along the outside of spinning circles, as you jump from one to the next while avoiding the little monsters that roam the paths. 

Things get both surreal very difficult before long as new enemies patterns emerge, forcing you think fast respond even faster. You’ll perish often, but Circa Infinity is such a uniquely mesmerizing experience that it compels you to keep going to master its tricks overcome its myriad twists.

Dub Dash

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If you think this looks wild, you should see Dub Dash in motion.

st in Harmony, an Android music game released earlier this month, has its tense moments, but is often calm pleasing. Dub Dash is something else entirely: This rhythm game prods you within moments rarely lets up, challenging you to guide a rolling wheel through pulsing stages filled with beat-match obstacles. And if you blow it, you’ll feel the pain. 

Evading hazards is a matter of tapping or holding the right or left side of the screen at first, but tricky patterns the dazzling, strobe-like presentation make it tough to prepare for what’s ahead. Dub Dash is also relentless, forcing you to restart an entire stage with a single mistake (unless you have extra hearts stored up), but rhythm game die-hards should love the challenge. It’s a unique pleasing take on the genre, if you’re up to the task. 

MyShake

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Do your part to help advance earthquake detection with MyShake.

Earthquakes are an ever-present threat in some areas, if your phone could help save lives someday, wouldn’t you want it to? MyShake is a new app from the UC Berkeley Seismological boratory, it uses the motion sensors in your phone to detect the very specific vibrational patterns that indicate a coming quake. In other words, running with your phone in your pocket probably won’t trigger the warning.

MyShake runs in the background seemingly uses minimal resources, when the right kind of vibrations are detected, an alert is sent to the UC Berkeley team. For now, you’re essentially just helping drive the research: th more than 100,000 installs already, they’re creating a blanket network of sensors that could help detect future quakes faster get warnings out to people in time to make more of a difference.

Kendall & Kylie

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Kendall & Kylie seems to find a sweet spot in both embracing mocking celebrity-obsessed culture.

Can’t get enough of the Kardashians? oking for new ways to keep up? ckily for you, Glu Games didn’t stop with Kim Kardashian: Hollywood, as the new Kendall & Kylie lets you create your own avatar interact with the youngest Kardashian sisters in an array of California hotspots.

It’s not dramatically different from Kim’s game, despite the switch to portrait orientation: You’ll navigate dialogue do a lot of busy work in the form of tapping icons collecting currency, all in the name of trying to go viral establish yourself in the fashion world. Kendall & Kylie is unsurprisingly vapid filled with freemium elements, offering to speed up delays with real money—but it’s still sure to please a lot of people, if the earlier game’s success is any indication.