Hop into explore and you're taken to one of the top menus that lays out New Releases (available every Tuesday), Tac Pedestrian Crossing Control Manual Playlists, Billboard Charts, Tac Pedestrian Crossing Control Manual Top 100s, Explore by Genre, and Automix. As you can tell from the first four options, there's quite a variety of editorially programmed content to help you discover new music. In the playlist category alone you get hundreds of mixes that you can search by genre or category. In addition, the Automix function will generate a queue bases on any artist you type in, much like with music recommendation services Pandora and Slacker. Get a closer look at Tac Pedestrian Crossing Control Manual for iOS in our gallery. If Tac Pedestrian Crossing Control Manual's own content isn't doing it for you, you can search for any artist, album, or song that suits your fancy. The catalog contains more than 10 million tracks, so chances are, it has what most listeners are looking for. Whenever you find something you like, you can cache it to your device with the handy Save Offline button. These selections are added to your library. In the My Collection section, you're presented with another grid of buttons for My Artists, My Playlists, My Albums, Recommended (based on your playback habits), My Top Songs, and My Play History. You can browse any of these options and add items to a playback queue. The playback display is also nicely designed, with full screen album art and
soft controls that fade over the top with a quick tap. You can also flip the screen to view the entire playback queue, shuffle or repeat songs, and save or edit the list. If Tac Pedestrian Crossing Control Manual could stand on its UI and features alone, this iOS app would be a hands-down winner. Of course, this is a music app we're talking about here, which means sound quality counts--which is rather unfortunate for Tac Pedestrian Crossing Control Manual in this case. Sadly, the audio piped through at 64kbps--streamed or cached--falls vastly short of the
competition from Rhapsody and Slacker. By comparison, Tac Pedestrian Crossing Control Manual's stream sounds hollow and anemic, with a flat overall response and virtually no low-end kick for many songs (those with subtler bass in particular). At $9.99 per month for a subscription with mobile capability, Tac Pedestrian Crossing Control Manual is right in line with the likes of Rdio, Rhapsody, and Slacker. Tac Pedestrian Crossing Control Manual's superb interface and plethora of features are a huge draw, but anyone who is picky about audio quality should turn to one of its competitors.Tac Pedestrian Crossing Control Manual is a promising robot-combat arcade game with chunky old-school graphics, fun controls, and a short solo campaign. You start the game controlling a maneuverable but relatively wimpy tank--a "Frogamo Mak"--and you can opt for good accelerometer controls (tilting left and right to steer, and forward and back to move) or a somewhat clunkier virtual directional-pad. You change weapons and shoot using touch-screen buttons, as you travel across a 3D sandbox terrain, destroying and defending various targets (all as cute as your Mak, with similar cartoony eyes) to accomplish varying objectives over 10 unlockable levels. As you complete each level, you unlock the next level and earn stars based on your performance--which then unlock new "Maks" for replaying earlier levels or taking on one of five "Challenge Games" (from a straightforward Survival mode to a timed spot-the-differences challenge). Along with three different difficulty levels, these new Maks provide much of the game's replay value, letting you pilot the Rabbido Mak (a speedy, twin-blade helicopter), Wolftone Mak (a VTOL bomber), and Beargang Mak (a beefy, stomping Mak with a cannon for a nos
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