Frequency personal video organizer app available for Android - One stop shopping for all your free video viewing! App Review

If you are like most of the Smartphone community, you use your device to watch videos. And if you love watching on your phone or tablet, it can be pretty annoying visiting so many different sites or loading a ton of apps to see all of the videos that interest you. Enter Frequency, a very cool, free app that is now available on Android after the iOS version received the Editor's Choice in the iTunes app store, and was chosen as one of the Top 100 Websites of 2013 by PC Magazine. 

The Frequency app is a very slick, easy to navigate app that gives you quick access to all of the free videos and video channels that you watch, and with more than 4,000 video channels in their database (and growing) you will always find entertaining ways to kill time, educate yourself or explore new channels. You can search for videos by topic or use their guide. You can even create your own channels and add your favorite stuff from such popular sources as YouTube, CNN, Funny Or Die and more. And if you just want to view some cool videos without searching or thinking, the Staff Picks channel is always a good choice. If you log in with your Facebook or Twitter account on Frequency, you will have a channel that features all of the videos that your friends and followers are posting, without having to scroll through all of the stuff they posted that you really don't care about.

Just download it and click around. Trust me. You'll discover the Featured section where you can view current top news stories, most shared videos, top comedy picks, up to the minute movie and TV trailers and the list goes on and on. Fox News, The Late Show with David Letterman, Reddit, CNN....see I told you. If you click on the Frequency Guide you can watch trending videos, animations, business, celebrities, fashion and on and on.

Basically, Frequency is a really cool browser app that focuses exclusively on videos. Be careful, you may sit there for hours once you get started. Just for kicks I clicked on "Celebrity" in the Guide. I was presented with video links to TMZ, The Hollywood Reporter, E!, Entertainment Weekly, Rolling Stone and a number of equally entertaining, but a bit less mainstream options like Stupid Famous People and Celeb Dirty Laundry. There are so many options on Frequency that each heading in their Guide gives you the option to view Popular, New or even alphabetical listings.

If you do the same with the News link, here you go again: CNN, BBC, New York Times, CBS. Time Magazine, Wall Street Journal.

And that list is just from two of the more than 40 options in their Frequency Guide.
So, if you're looking for a smooth, slick interface for watching video on your Android (or iPhone or tablet), you must download this app. You can thank me later.

Look into the future and the past with SeeTime app - What day were you born on? Android app review

You probably know your birthday, but maybe you don't know what day of the week you were born on? Sure you can count on your fingers backwards starting today and figure it out or you can download SeeTime a very cool and efficient app for Android which will figure it all out for you...and more.

SeeTime (available free in Google Play) is a simple yet fun app, which will allow you to pick any date in the past or the future and determine what day of the week it was or will be, and how may days, weeks, months or years ago it was, or will be. Kinda cool.

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The default configuration when you open the app is a bit confusing. It has today's date pre-loaded at the top of the screen and shows information 15 days weeks months or years into the future and the past. Frankly I don't care about what happens 15 months from now or 15 months ago. Not a notable time-frame. However I might want to know what day of the week Neil Armstrong walked on the moon. Why? I have no idea. Actually I don't care what day it was. But you might. And See-time makes it easy to discover.

So I'm going to explain how to use this cute little app to find out what day of the week any past or future date was or is going to be. See, I told you it could be confusing.

In IMAGE 1 at left, click on the the back arrow circled in red at the bottom right until the big red number is at 0. Then click to change the date (inside the second red circle in IMAGE 1. You will immediately discover the day of the week it was and depending on whether you have selected Day, Week, Month or Year you will also know how many days, weeks, months or years ago it was.

For some reason, you will also be able to view the same info the same number of years into the future. That kind of sucks when you get a bit older, because it will probably be a date when you'll be dead.

How many months old are you?

How long, after a baby is born, is it okay to give the child's age in months? Most parents say "Junior is 18
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months old" instead of a year and a half? Oh come on. Enough already. How about we all do that?

With the nifty SeeTime app you too can annoy others by giving your age in months instead of years. Let's say you're 46 years old and someone asks you how old you are now you can say I am 562 months old.

You can do this (see IMAGE 2) by clicking on the "M" (months), and changing the Past date to your birthday. Voila!

What else happened on the day you were born?

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Aside from the monumental event of your birth, what else happened on the day you were born? With Seetime, you can search for news on any given day. Unfortunately it doesn't work for dates in the future, or this would be a really cool app.

To check on the news, weather, movies, history for any past date, begin by clicking on those four little vertical lines on the right center of the main page. It may tell you that you haven't selected a date, but here is the easiest way to get access to your chosen date: click on the Change button (circled on IMAGE 3) and put in the date you want. It basically just takes you to Google for this info, but is still pretty cool.

This app requires no permissions whatsoever, making it a really fun and safe app to add to your roster. Recommended for silly, accurate fun.