Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Social Media
  3. Mobile
  4. Legacy Archives

Pearltrees launches Android app, makes leap into file management

Add as a preferred source on Google
pearltrees
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Android users looking for a novel way to organize your information, look no further. Pearltrees announced that its app is finally launching to Android phones, and the platform is adding some Android-like functionality.

From the get-go Pearltrees will support 2,500 Android devices and 98.3 percent of Android operating systems, which is commendable considering the varying assortment of screen sizes and should-be-retired Android OS’ that are still in use out there. “Tiny” screen sizes for obvious reasons – considering the need to navigate through trees of information – won’t benefit from the update.

Recommended Videos

With branches extending to and from trees and pearls hanging from or connecting each branch, we’ve highlighted its novelty before. Pearltrees looks something like a next generation user interface for managing those pesky and unorganized digital files of our operating systems. While Pearltrees doesn’t see itself as an answer to the operating system, the app is well aware of the opportunities that come with its system. Alongside today’s launch, Pearltrees is making a game changing leap with an upgrade that transforms the app into a file management platform. In fact Pearltrees wants to become the universal file manager for the PC, explains chief evangelist Oliver Starr. This doesn’t mean that the Pearltrees that you’ve become accustomed to is disappearing; existing features will remain. Rather, the Android app will come with a few extra bells and whistles that iOS users won’t get to enjoy.

For instance, if you’ve bookmarked a YouTube video with Pearltrees, clicking on the video normally opens the video inside of YouTube’s Website, but now tapping on a Pearl with a YouTube video opens up the YouTube Android app and then the video. This is important Starr explains because Pearltrees’ changes not only enables users to save notes and photos that can be opened up using other apps within your Android phone; this will allow users to eventually upload and view files, kind of like what Dropbox offers, although this isn’t a feature that is being rolled out immediately.

A second intriguing feature is the algorithmic smarts that Pearltrees’ engineers have baked into the platform. To make file organizing far, far easier than traditional operating systems and even Dropbox’s slipshod interface, uploading files, saving Webpages, and the generally menial task of organizing your files can be done automatically for you. With just about every file or page that’s added as a Pearl, Pearltrees is able to make sense of the types of categories these Pearls would best fit under and display these categorical Pearls appropriately. All you have to do is get used to retrieving information via a tree graph.

Starr adds that Pearltrees is already “generating significant” revenue with well over 1 million contributors, 2 million active users, 55 million objects in the Database, and more than 1 million iOS downloads.

Francis Bea
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Francis got his first taste of the tech industry in a failed attempt at a startup during his time as a student at the…
Reddit may ask you to prove you’re human as it cracks down on bot accounts
Suspicious activity could trigger human verification
Reddit

Reddit is stepping up its fight against bots, and now your account could be asked to prove it is human if the platform detects fishy behaviour.

Reddit CEO Steve Huffman says these checks will be rare, but they are meant to protect what makes Reddit work in the first place – real people talking to real people.

Read more
You are about to see a flood of product recommendations on Instagram and Facebook
Meta’s new tools let creators plug products directly in content, with Amazon and Shopee leading the first wave of in-feed buying.
facebook

The line between content and commerce just got a lot harder to see, as your Instagram and Facebook feeds are about to shift in a noticeable way.

Meta is rolling out new affiliate tools that let creators tag items directly inside posts and Reels, which means more recommendations will show up right where you’re already scrolling.

Read more
Reddit wants to check if you’re using the iPhone’s Face ID camera
The company is considering new identity tools to tackle its growing bot problem
Reddit app on iPhone

Reddit may soon ask users to prove they’re human, and it might involve your face. During a TBPN podcast, Reddit's CEO, Steve Huffman, confirmed that the platform is exploring new identity verification methods, including using Face ID or Touch ID-style authentication, to tackle its growing bot problem.

https://twitter.com/alexisohanian/status/2035154057942245514?s=20

Read more