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https://play.google....7mobile.nplayer

This is my default music player looks like this

 

O.o Sent via Tapatalk using GT-I9103 o.O

 

Tried this on my phone. It actually is quite cool (just looks a little ugly when zoomed out :P ) and the widget for the homescreen looks good. Thanks dude, I might stick to this one for a while.

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Guys, get AndroidGet from Play Store. Perfect HTTP (and FTP in paid) downloader on Android. Splits file into 3-8 segments and speeds up downloads just like IDM. Also has credential manager for those with premium accounts ! :thumbsup:

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ok guys i have an android version 2.3.4 in my droid bionic phone and so i usually use wi-fi, but now i want to use internet from my sim card i.e. reliance so when i go to the network settings and i go to mobile networks which has Network mode, Select Network, Operator selection and Access point names, Further when i go to any of this 4 options it gives me the following error:

 

The process com.android.phone has stopped unexpectedly.please try again.

 

pl0x someone help me

 

 

Edit: And yeah i want formatting to be the last option :P

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Google Wallet now takes all cards - debit and credit! :happydance:

 

http://techcrunch.com/2012/08/01/google-wallet-all-credit-debit-cards/

 

Of all the limitations that Google’s NFC-based Wallet payment system had, perhaps the biggest was that of card compatibility — once you blew through that free $10 credit, it only ever worked well if you owned a CitiBank MasterCard.

 

Note the use of the past tense in that sentence. Google recently revealed a substantial update to the Wallet service that allows it to (finally) play nice with Visa, Discover, and American Express credit or debit cards.

 

It’s all thanks to a dramatic change in how Google Wallet handles users’ credit and debit card information — Google Wallet product manager Robin Dua explains it like so:

 

To support all credit and debit cards, we changed our technical approach to storing payment cards. The Google Wallet app now stores your payment cards on highly secure Google servers, instead of in the secure storage area on your phone. A wallet ID (virtual card number) is stored in the secure storage area of the phone, and this is used to facilitate transactions at the point of sale. Google instantly charges your selected credit or debit card.

 

That’s not all Google has been working on — also on deck is a new remote wipe feature that allows users to reset the Wallet app and purge all related financial data right from the service’s online management site.

 

While the update has effectively opened up the service to scores of new users, Google Wallet still has a ways to go before it becomes as ubiquitous as Google likely wants it to be. A quick look at the list of supported devices highlights nicely how much headway Google has to make — there are only eight devices listed, and all but two of them (the unlocked Galaxy Nexus and the Nexus 7, naturally) are tied up with Sprint.

 

Now that the action has moved to the cloud and secure element issue isn’t really an issue any more, one has to wonder if Verizon customers will finally be able to get in on the NFC payment fun (officially, anyway). The carrier took issue with the app’s use of that secure hardware element, and cited it as a reason why the service wasn’t available for the LTE Galaxy Nexus late last year. Alas, that hurdle doesn’t seem to have been cleared yet — it doesn’t appear in the Play Store while searching on my VZW Galaxy Nexus, and the app (which I installed way back when) itself still refers to the device as “unsupported.”

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Google Wallet now takes all cards - debit and credit! :happydance:

 

http://techcrunch.co...it-debit-cards/

 

 

You made my day bro! :hug:

Have been waiting for this. It didn't accept my card. Now FINALLY I'm gonna buy Tapatalk. :happydance:

 

 

EDIT: Was it a manual update or automatic update? Cause it's still not accepting my card. :(

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Oh god, wait... I think I'm slightly confusing you guys.... I meant the NFC app from Google - Google Wallet - for use on NFC phones like the Galaxy Nexus. To pay at stores like CVS where they have those NFC readers or Mastercard Paypass readers. I'm not sure about whether any cards (until now only Citi Mastercards) can be added online. My Bank of America VISA (debit) and my international AMEX (credit) both work. Haven't yet tried the IndianOil Mastercard or Matrix VISA. I'll give my 2 VISA credit cards from BoA a shot when I get them in mid-August.

 

If it works on the Wallet app then it most certainly should work online. What Google Wallet is now doing is adding your card via a virtual Mastercard. So I don't see a reason why it shouldn't add online (unless there's some region restriction). I don't know whether this is connected to the Play Store itself accepting any new kind of credit cards/debit cards.

 

As for the app itself, it was on my phone already but I had to go to the Play Store and hit update to get it to install the newest version. Didn't automatically update.

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