Gmail receiving ability to Block or Unsubscribe pesky emails
Google is going to be adding two new features in Gmail, aimed specifically at making it easier to avoid the constant unwanted clutter in your inbox. In the past, we’ve seen Google simplifying the inbox by allowing us to send topics to different folders. Now it’s time to make sure items that belong in the Spam folder go there.
First up is the ability to block specific email addresses. Google says that you’ll be able to choose to “Never see messages from this person again.”
Upon blocking, future mail from the sender will go into the Spam folder. Google says that the feature is available on the web today and in the Android Gmail app over the next week.
The option to unsubscribe from mailing lists is coming to Android Gmail app as well. As implied, you’ll be able to opt out of newsletter subscriptions directly from the app.
What do you think about these new Gmail features? Hit up the source link below for the official word.
Source: Gmail Blog
The post Gmail receiving ability to Block or Unsubscribe pesky emails appeared first on AndroidGuys.
Google should steal these iOS features for Android
After the recent announcement of Apple’s iPhone 6S and iOS 9 (along with the confusing iPad Pro), I started thinking that there is a lot Android could learn (or just steal) from. There are a few features Google has yet to implement or get right with Android even to this day.
Also, due to Android being on more devices than iOS, I won’t be talking about things like build quality or better cameras because Android is meant to run on many different types of devices, all at different price points. It’s not fair to say Android should get a better camera, like the iPhone’s, when this would be a manufacturer issue and not actually an Android problem.
Fast Updates
Google may release new versions of Android every year or so but good luck actually seeing it come to your phone. Even the most expensive high-end Android phones usually don’t see the latest version of Android until about six months later. If you have a low-end or mid-range device phone, your chances of seeing multiple updates in its lifetime are slim.
Apple’s iOS 9, on the other hand, was officially announced on June 8 with public beta testing starting on July 9. A month later, on September 9, the company unveiled the iPhone 6S and iPhone 6S Plus running an official version of iOS 9. Both will be available around the world on September 25. iOS 9 actually came out a bit before the iPhone 6S on September 16. Not only is that a fast release, but the amount of included devices to get the iOS 9 update on the same day is huge. Even as far back as the iPad 2, which was unveiled in March 2011, by Steve Jobs, will be receiving the iOS 9 update. Look at all the devices that saw the update on September 16.
I understand Android is a much larger ecosystem with many more devices having to be coded for the latest update, but the wait is just crazy. You would think at least the flagship devices from the top manufactures would receive the latest updates in a timely fashion but that isn’t the case. Once Google creates the next version of Android, it has to be passed down to the device manufacturers and after that the carriers perform tests of their own. This creates a sluggish release and most of the time results in bugs which aren’t taken care of until the next update. You could be waiting up to an entire year to receive the next update just to fix small bugs you got from the last update. It has gotten a bit quicker over the years but is still comically bad compared to how Apple handles the process.
Full Phone Backups
One of the first things I noticed when I made the switch to Android from iOS was that there was no way of backing up my device. If it got lost, stolen, broke, or I just wanted another phone, there was no easy way of loading all data to it. This became extremely annoying and frustrating. The most insane part was the only way to do a full backup was to root your phone in order to install an app that could back it up. You couldn’t even get an app from the Play Store without having root access.
Nowadays there are apps like Helium, which can backup your phone without ROOT access, but this is not something users should have to install, but should be included directly into Android. Other manufacturers, like Samsung, have backup tools as well, but they aren’t that easy to use and, again, shouldn’t even be needed.
With iOS you can back up to iCloud or plug the iPhone into your computer to back up with iTunes. Very simple and hassle-free. I have had problems with iPhones and Android devices, both having to fully return the device for a new one. When I returned the iPhone 3GS and got a new one, I just plugged it into my computer and iTunes set everything up just like how I had it. When I returned my Android phone and got a new one, it was basically hours of re-downloading apps and entering passwords for each one. I am not an app-heavy person, but I can not imagine how horrible it would be for people with tons and tons of apps installed.
Google has said the next version of Android, Marshmallow, will be able to backup all your app data to Google Drive for free. It has a limit of only 25MB per app, but at least we are heading in the right direction.
No Bloat
I am so tired of paying huge amounts of money for high-end phones only to have half their internal storage gone towards useless pre-installed apps. The carrier ones are especially annoying because they never offer anything great and are usually ripoffs of better apps. Feel free to make all the apps your want, but release them in the Play Store and tell your customers to get them. Don’t force these apps down their throats.
I bought an unlocked phone from one carrier and use it on another carrier, but still have the first carrier’s garbage installed. Obviously, I’m never going to use their apps to check my plan or whatever, but I’m forced to have them installed forever. Again, this is an unlocked phone that I paid full price for. I have no connection with this carrier at all and there is no reason why I shouldn’t be able to uninstall their apps.
Manufacturer bloat is sometimes as bad as the carriers’. I can understand that each manufacturer has to give consumers a reason to choose their phones. And when most of your competition is also using the same operating system, it becomes more difficult. They have to create unique apps and user interfaces to get consumers to buy their products over the rest. Fair enough. However, it is extremely annoying having apps like Facebook pre-installed on my phone. The most infuriating thing is being unable to remove them. Android is supposed to be all about choice and personal freedom, but having apps like Facebook forcefully installed ruins all of that.
I’m sure everyone has installed an app from the Play Store and seen a huge list of requesting permissions for you to accept. I appreciate being shown this list as it gives me the decision to install it or not. When apps are pre-installed, that choice is taken away, and since you can’t uninstall them, those apps can “spy” on you forever. I can just picture Mark Zuckerberg sitting at his desk, laughing away, knowing that you can never escape his control.
Apple knew from the first day of the App Store’s existence that this would be annoying and forced the carriers to agree to not include any extra apps on the iPhone. They also don’t pre-install any third-party apps.
Uniformity/Simplicity
This is another one that is tricky to fix. As I mentioned already, Android has a huge user base with different devices, making it very difficult to keep everyone on the same page. Google does a good job creating guidelines, such as Material Design, for everyone to follow, but many developers do not care to implement them into their apps, creating a problem when actually using many Android devices as nothing ever matches very well. There really isn’t an easy way to fix this without having harsh penalties towards developers who don’t modify their apps to reflect the new design principles, and that would go against what Android is all about.
However, there is no excuse for large manufacture skins. They have the money to hire the best designers in the world and their skins should reflect that. I hate buying a new Android phone only to instantly replace the keyboard, messaging app, and launcher because they don’t match anything else or function horribly.
Technically, the purest form of Android would be on a Nexus device. Definitely the smoothest of all Android phones, but compared to the latest iPhone, it’s really not that smooth. There are always little bugs or animation glitches that don’t make it perfect compared to the iPhone. Anyone who has used a Nexus device and an iPhone will know exactly what I mean.
There are other little things like the icons being all different sizes. Luckily, aftermarket launchers like Nova Launcher are adding uniformed icons that are visually the same size while still maintaining different shapes, but this shouldn’t be something aftermarket launchers even have to worry about and definitely already built into Android.
Plus, features like the notifications bar including quick toggles. Only recently did stock Android get this feature and it’s not implemented as well as it is in iOS, in my opinion.
Other things like showing the actual battery percentage at the top, as far as I know, still isn’t possible in stock Android. Just look at the status bar on the iPhone compared to the Nexus 6. Both are probably about 44%, but it’s impossible to tell on the Nexus 6 since it won’t tell you real numbers.
Android provides a lot of unnecessary work.
Battery Efficiency
The iPhone 6 has an 1810mAh battery and the iPhone 6S has a 1715mAh battery. Apple made it smaller this time around! Both batteries are very small compared to Android flagships and yet they last roughly the same amount of time. For a phone with a battery that is basically half of an Android phone’s, it should be much worse. One reason they get such long lasting performance is because iPhone’s barely lose any battery while in standby mode. When you aren’t using it, you basically aren’t using the battery either. Android phones will have double the size battery and lose 4%-20% just while you are asleep. Again, this is with basically double the size! If the iPhone drained that much, you would go to sleep just to wake up to basically a dead phone every morning.
Fortunately, Google sees this as a huge problem too and is working on a new feature called Doze for Android 6.0 Marshmallow. It is tasked with watching how you use your phone and adjusting certain things when you aren’t using it to give you maximum standby battery life. Will this feature realistically improve battery life? I can’t say right now, but we can certainly hope it will. The only problem I can see is where Google says Doze will only work when your phone is perfectly still. Once you start moving, the feature turns off. This means if your phone is in your pocket all day, literally doing nothing, Doze will seemingly not be working and battery drain will be the same. If you leave your phone on a desk all day, that is when Doze would be saving you battery. I think, overall, it’s meant for when you are asleep and won’t be looking at your phone at all. Also, don’t forget Doze is only for devices running Marshmallow, meaning you probably won’t be receiving it on your device anytime soon. Either way, this is a huge area that Android needs improvement in.
Rogue apps are another huge problem for battery life. Most of the time, apps use what I would consider to be a normal amount of battery drain, but every once in a while a ‘noob’ developer will release an app that works great yet murders battery life. Even huge apps like Facebook are always notorious for using an absurd amount of battery life. Whether the developer isn’t as skilled to create an app with battery efficiency or a large developer does not spend the time making their app energy-efficient, this has got to change. Apple’s iOS never runs into these problems, and Google definitely needs to investigate how they do it, and implement it into Android.
Tap To Top
On any iOS device, you can just tap the top of the screen in any app to get back to the top of it. This is amazing for long webpages where you would reach the bottom, but want to go back to the top; all you had to do was tap and you were there. With Android, you have to scroll for what feels like days. After knowing a feature like this exist elsewhere, it feels so primitive having to physically scroll to the top. I assume Apple has a patent on this feature, which is why no one has ripped it off yet. Samsung, though, did try to clone it on their Galaxy S III, but asked users to tap the phsysical top of the device to get to the top. It wasn’t as clean to use since the device was much larger than an iPhone at the time, but the worst part was it only worked in certain Samsung supported apps. Something like Apple’s ‘tap to top’ feature would be highly welcomed in Android.
So what do you think — which features does Google need to consider implementing in Android?
Come comment on this article: Google should steal these iOS features for Android
Starbucks adds mobile pay and ordering to its Android app
The day when you no longer have to scream “No, you fool! I ordered a Venti Decaf Non-Fat Pumpkin Spice Latte!” at your barista is finally upon us. Starbucks has tweaked its Android app to bake-in both ordering and payments straight from your phone, saving you the drama of having to explain your arcane coffee needs to another human. The feature was originally tested last December in Portland, and was added to the iOS version of the app back in July. The app will work in the US, Canada and in the UK, although the mobile ordering will only work in stores that the company owns — there’s a big venti question mark over if it’ll work in other locations. Oh, and don’t shout at your barista, because it’s both very rude and a one-way ticket to guaranteeing your coffee has something extra special inside.
Source: Google Play
Google asks academia to help advance Cardboard VR research
Google announced its Cardboard VR headset basically as an afterthought at the end of its 2014 I/O conference, but since then the platform’s grown into a viable means of experiencing virtual reality. Much like its peers have done in the past, Mountain View is reaching out to academia to submit research proposals that’ll hopefully advance the medium. According to the project’s Google+ page (naturally) the team’s looking for research in areas including immersive audio; optics and displays; computer graphics and rendering and user input technology. Interested? You’ve got until October 15th to make your submission.
Source: Google Cardboard (G+)
Google releases revamped Wallet for iPhones and iPads
Apple’s mobile devices are never going to get Android Pay, but Google has released its repurposed Wallet app for iOS anyway. Just like its Android counterpart, the app is now decked in green (with the new logo!) and focuses on person-to-person payments. If you’ve never used it before, note that you can use Wallet to split tabs with friends, send and receive payments, which you can then cash out to a debit card. It doesn’t look like Mountain View listed it as a separate download on iTunes like it did on Google Play, so you can just update your old app to get the new one.
New Google Wallet for iOS available now on the App Store. Easily split bills and settle up! https://t.co/Iz2Gi6EZNp pic.twitter.com/nlyV0ZABLZ
— Google Wallet (@googlewallet) September 21, 2015
Source: iTunes
Google snaps up staff from Oyster’s soon-to-close e-book service
Oyster’s experiment with a Netflix-like subscription service for e-books appears to be coming to a close… at least, in its current form. The startup is warning customers that it will shut down its all-you-can-read service over the course of several months. As it explains, the team has decided that the best way to pursue its mobile reading dream is to take on “new opportunities.” While it’s not initially clear what this means, Recode has confirmed that “a portion” of Oyster’s staff (including its CEO and co-founders) are jumping ship for Google’s Play Books division. In short, this is an indirect acquisition — Google is snapping up the core of the company without buying all of its assets.
There are hints at a possible resurgence, whether it’s at Google or somewhere else, but we wouldn’t count on this unlimited reading model coming back as-is. Unlike with movies, most book enthusiasts don’t read so voraciously that they can justify dropping $10 per month. Oyster added purchasable books well after it got started, and likely too late to help. And we’d note that Oyster was trying to take on Amazon, the 800-pound gorilla of e-books — unless it offered something that made Amazon’s business strategy seem quaint, it was always going to face an uphill battle. As sad as it is to lose an interesting alternative to the pay-per-book model, this outcome isn’t that shocking.
Via: Recode, Publishers Weekly
Source: Oyster
Google Clock app update v4.2: UI changes, ascending alarm volume, separate tones and more
Google’s Clock is probably the app you worry the least about, but no doubt it’s also one of the most useful tools we can find in our Android smartphones. This is why the Search Giant is so fond of always making it as useful and pleasant as possible. The latest update brings the software up to version 4.2. Wondering what’s new? Let’s tell you all about the most noticeable changes!
The biggest improvement is likely the addition of ascending volume for alarms. This simply means that alarm tones will no longer just blast through your speakers; the sound will gradually increase in volume until it reaches its full potential, making your waking time much smoother and more pleasant.
Another cool new feature included in this update is the ability to set different ringtones for alarms and timers, which definitely makes sense. You don’t want to confuse these, right?
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Other changes seem to be purely aesthetic, but they will also add some functionality. The Menu button has been moved to the top-right corner, where it is available from any page within the app, whereas before it could only be found in the main page. In addition, the floating action button is smaller and the navigation bar is more transparent with compatible phones.
This iteration of the Clock app should be rolling out through the Google Play Store as we speak. But keep in mind this happens gradually too. Not all users will see it yet. You can just wait around for the Google Play Store to have it ready for you, but the APK file is also available from here. You know, just in case you are really in that much of a rush.
[Deal] Nexus Player and ASUS Nexus Player controller only $49.99 and $29.99 from Best Buy
Google’s Nexus Player console and the wireless gamepad for the Nexus Player are only $49.99 and $29.99, respectively, through Best Buy for a limited time. The Nexus Player normally retails for $99.99 and the ASUS wireless controller for $39.99, so this is a deal you don’t want to miss!
Google’s Nexus Play has seen similar deals as of late, with some wondering if this means another Nexus Player is on the way. In fact, a FCC filing from last week indicate that these new Nexus Player rumors could be true. And it just might be possible that we’ll hear something at Google’s even next week in San Francisco.
In the meantime, you can get your hands on the Nexus Player and its wireless gamepad by hitting one of the source links below.
Anyone picking one up?
Come comment on this article: [Deal] Nexus Player and ASUS Nexus Player controller only $49.99 and $29.99 from Best Buy
Get an Android Developer Nanodegree in India with Udacity
Google is introducing a new Android developer course that partners with Udacity where students in India can earn a Nanodegree. The degree is to help new “developers learn new skills and advance their careers in a few months.”
The courses are taught by expert Google instructors from the Google Developer Relations team. It also includes project reviews, mentorship and career services from Udacity.
India has more than 3 million software developers and is the second largest developer population in the world. However, the apps created there are still behind many other countries and this program is trying to change that.
Today, only less than 2% of apps built in India feature in top 1000 apps globally and our goal is to raise this to 10% in next three years.
The Udacity Android Nanodegree program is open starting today. The program will take 6-9 months to finish and cost Rs. 9,800 per month with Udacity refunding 50 percent of the tuition once completion.
Google has also partnered with Tata Trusts to give away 1000 scholarships, also available starting today. Please visit https://www.udacity.com/india for more information.
Come comment on this article: Get an Android Developer Nanodegree in India with Udacity
Chromecast Audio to WiFi-enable your speakers, codenamed “Hendrix”
A few days ago we got a glimpse at what the new Chromecast will offer. It is expected to drop at Google’s Sept. 29th event, along with the highly-anticipated pair of Nexus phones. Now we have some more info on the Chromecast Audio part of that launch, which is allegedly codenamed “Hendrix” within Google.
To recap, Chromecast Audio is said to be a separate Chromecast device, specifically aimed to set your home speakers free. This means that it will plug into your audio setup and wirelessly connect to your WiFi router.
This will allow you to remotely control the speaker through your smartphone or tablet. If this kind of thing sounds familiar to you, you may be remembering the Moto Stream. But Google may feel like they should do to speakers what they’ve done to TV’s. And it should be competitively priced.
The Chromecast Audio should have multi-room support, so you can utilize every speaker in the house to raise the roof. Communication via WiFi means you can have them rock out with the same track in unison. However, to do this, it is assumed you would need a Chromecast Audio for each speaker.
The Chromecast Audio will mirror the audio from your Chrome browser or Android device. If you’re worried that this operation will sacrifice precious bytes of music data, Google is said to be focusing on “high-quality” audio for the device.
We should know the full scoop next week, stay tuned! Do you like this audio extension to the Chromecast portfolio?
Source: 9to5google
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