We're launching a little side-project today. It's an app for Android phones that lets you read The Guardian, anywhere. We've imaginatively called it "Guardian Anywhere".
It's designed to meet a simple use case: you want the news on your phone to read on your commute into work. You can tell the app to download your newspaper whenever you like, perhaps early in the morning before you wake up. You can also tell it to only grab the news over Wi-fi; there's a surprising amount of stuff in the Guardian each day, and we don't want you running your battery down grabbing it all over 3G.
Once it's downloaded, the content lives on your phone - perfect if you're travelling on the tube or through some of the more radio-challenged parts of the countryside (like, coincidentally, the Brighton-to-London line). As well as news stories, you get a pile of photographic imagery which the Guardian publishes every day. We've also tried to retain a little bit of the Guardian look and feel throughout, though this isn't an official Guardian product.
If you play with it a while, you'll discover a few other nifty features tucked away, like:
- Saving some of the fine photography to your phone as wallpapers;
- Choosing which sections of the paper to subscribe to (or which to avoid);
- Clipping articles or photos into a "Saved Articles" folder, to help you skim for interesting stuff and then peruse it at your leisure;
- Browsing through articles by section, author or tag. This makes it easy to find, say, all the articles in todays paper relating to executive pay and bonuses; and if you're really interested in a tag (or author), you can subscribe to it;
Guardian Anywhere is the brainchild of James Hugman, who kicked the project off during his gold card time and has been demonstrating it to us ever since at our fortnightly reviews. We've been testing and revising the app internally, and launched it onto the Android Marketplace after putting it in for the Android Developer Challenge.
All feedback is, as always, warmly welcome - please do try the app out and leave us some comments in the Market. The little 2D barcode you can see to the right of this paragraph is quite handy for getting hold of the app. Scan it with the barcode scanner on your Android phone to be taken to the right place in the Android Market, click the link if you're reading this with an Android phone, or just search the Market for "Guardian".
Brilliant application! We' were very impressed with the number of functionalities it offers and the way that content is made available on the device itself. The image-gallery was a complete knock-down for us.
BTW. We noticed a small bug. When reading an article with image(s), quick-press on the image brings up the context menu, but a long press crashes the article reading and brings you back to the article list. [We used HTC Magic]...
Best of luck on ADC2!
Posted by: DroidZine | September 14, 2009 at 10:53 PM
Fantastic work Tom and James! /downloaded/. Definitely the best major UK news app I've yet used on Android.
Posted by: twitter.com/Alfie | September 15, 2009 at 08:04 PM
Thanks Tom, very good work.
Posted by: twitter.com/Briantist | September 16, 2009 at 09:21 AM
Excellent. Love the QR code, cute. :) Downloaded, about to test it on a bus. Thanks!
Posted by: twitter.com/adriana872 | September 16, 2009 at 10:15 AM
I followed your "Gold Card" link and read about it. It is an excellent idea that every team should adopt!
Posted by: Itay Maman | September 16, 2009 at 10:52 PM
Great app, but could you add the option to only download certain sections to save time?
Posted by: Peter | September 25, 2009 at 04:53 PM
Lol, i had to laugh... I started out my OTA09 experience with your "Climbing the Mobile Mountain" session (good stuff!) - happy to finally be able to meet the famous Mr. Hume, went on to finish up the conference winning a (much unexpected) HTC Hero, which i promptly started using on Sunday and the first app i saw was a Guardian Anywhere. This is great because in the week since i got my first android (Magic) a week ago, the guardian mobi site has been my #1 companion on the commute to work. And on the final bus home having installed Twidroid, i came across a tweet linking to this blog, and now i find out who was involved in making Guardian Anywhere, bringing us neatly full circle!
Really like the app, but I'd say it has one glaring omission: no guardian comment section! Is this a conscious decision to leave some things exclusive to the guardian website, or simply an oversight? If it's the latter, i'd be the first to vote for including that in the app.
So, great meeting you, and thanks for bringing my favourite news source and my new favourite mobile experience to such a happy union! Hope to see you at a conference again sometime! ;-)
-Elliot
Posted by: Elliot | September 28, 2009 at 01:23 PM
Elliot - glad you liked the app :) It currently gets all its content through the Guardian RSS feeds, which don't include comments I'm afraid - so there's no plan to add them in right now.
The app itself is unofficial and independent of the Guardian, so this hasn't been driven by a desire to keep some content exclusive.
Posted by: Tom Hume | September 28, 2009 at 01:41 PM
Fantastic, great app. Crowded tube journeys no longer a problem. Good bye Metro.
Thanks a ton
Bala
Posted by: Bala | October 29, 2009 at 05:41 PM
Bah! Not available on my shiny new HTC Tattoo because the screen is too small. Is there anything that can be done? I was becoming slightly dependant on this app so it's a shame I can't see it in the market anymore.
Nick
Posted by: Nick | November 18, 2009 at 10:51 AM
am loving this app,but could you tell us how large in data sizes the daily update is,gotta keep a grip on my internet downloads dontcha know,thanks again
Posted by: stuart riddell | November 22, 2009 at 03:16 PM
Stuart
While the RSS feeds are uncompressed they are coming down at 100-300K each (for the text ones). These are downloaded each time - we need to do this because stories in them change quite frequently.
We cache images as much as we can - so they're only downloaded once. Each image is about 50-60k, plus 10k for a thumbail. For an initial download, you need 18 feeds and about 1000 images.
Tom
Posted by: Tom Hume | December 08, 2009 at 03:42 PM
Great application indeed! The only are of improvement could be to have more fresh news when downloading the news; some times they're 1 day ago. anyway it's a good stard!
Florian
Posted by: florian | January 11, 2010 at 04:57 PM
Amazing App, can't live without it!!! my problem is I go back and fourth between my T-Mobile G1 (android) and my Unlocked iPhone. can you please put the app out for the iPhone??
Thanks,
Brett
Posted by: Brett | January 21, 2010 at 01:01 AM
Hi,
this looks great, but I don't seem to be able to switch between stories being stuck with the one displayed on the widget only. Help please.
Posted by: Paul Brannan | January 21, 2010 at 09:09 PM