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Posts tagged ‘Google’

1
Jun

“Okay, Google” command from any screen returns to Galaxy S6


samsung galaxy s6 edge unboxing aa (19 of 20)

Google confirmed, and we verified, that the “Okay, Google” hotword command is now working again on the Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 Edge.

The feature has been broken for weeks, and the fact that the option to activate it was completely missing from the Settings section made some users believe it was an intentional omission by Samsung. As it turns out, the reason was a plain old bug, or more precisely a conflict between the Google app and Samsung’s own voice command feature, S Voice.

A Google representative announced on the company’s product forums that the problem has been fixed. In order to get the feature to work, you will need to have the latest Google app update (4.5 or higher, the current one being 4.6). If you have the latest version and you can’t see the feature, try uninstalling the updates to the Google app and then updating it to the latest version. That’s how our Nirave managed to get it to work on his Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge. Worst case, you may need to clear the cached data of the Google app, though that means you will be signed out of your Google account.

One more thing: because of said conflict with S Voice, enabling “Okay, Google” from any screen will disable S Voice, except for the times when the screen is off. Basically, you will have to decide between the two assistants, but we’re pretty sure that won’t be a problem for many of you.

1
Jun

Nintendo’s new ‘NX’ console will reportedly run Android


Nintendo has already said that it won’t be talking about its new NX console until 2016, but that hasn’t stopped a few tantalising details from slipping out to the press. Nikkei reports that the new hardware will use the Android operating system, as Nintendo seeks a more open platform that’s already been embraced by third-party developers. We’re firmly in rumors and speculation territory here, but there’s some basis for the claim. Nintendo has hinted that the NX will be positioned alongside the 3DS and the Wii U, rather than as a direct replacement for either system. The Wii U has been a commercial flop, but that doesn’t mean the NX will be a traditional home console competing directly with the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One. It could be something completely different — fans have suggested a hybrid device that gamers could play both at home and on the go.

Portability would play to Android’s strengths, particularly if Nintendo wants to leverage its upcoming phone and tablet games. However, if the company does indeed use the platform, there’s no guarantee that it’ll look like the typical Android experience found on phones and tablets. The Wii U and 3DS suffer from sluggish operating systems, menus and apps — Nintendo could use a heavily modified version of Google’s platform to quietly offload the problem and focus on what it does best, which is making high quality games.

Filed under: Gaming, Nintendo

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Via: NeoGAF, IGN

Source: Nikkei

1
Jun

Diving into M: tablets get split keyboard and dynamic notification shade placement


Nexus-9-Android-M-Notifications-Left-5

We were all very excited by the new features and software upgrades released and announced at Google I/O 2015 this past week. Included was the release of the Android M developer preview for a short list of Nexus devices. Including the Nexus 9 tablet, which we just happen to be giving away for free this week.

As we dive into the new Android release, we’ve found a number of cool new features, including a split keyboard option for the Google keyboard on your tablet, and a three position dynamic notification shade drop down. Let’s take a look at those real quick.

Image credit: Duncan Adkins via Android Police

Image credit: Duncan Adkins via Android Police

The split keyboard functionality is not a new thing for Android, especially on tablet sized devices, however, this is a first for Google’s keyboard. The premise is simple, it can be a little difficult to extend your thumbs all the way across the screen of a tablet, so the keyboard splits into two and pushes the buttons to the sides to make it easier to reach when two thumb typing.

The dynamic placement of the new Android M notification shade for tablets is also not a new thing, we just haven’t seen it in a while. The idea for this is also very simple, Android on your tablet will now try to drop down the notification shade as close to your finger as possible, choosing from one of three set locations. The default location is dead center, as it has been for a while now on Android tablets. From there, the shade will shift left or right depending on your finger placement.

Nexus-9-Android-M-Notifications-Right-3

These are not ground breaking ideas or new tools, but it is great to see Google putting effort into fine tuning the Android experience, taking advantage of, or at least taking into consideration, the larger displays found on most tablets. It will be interesting to see if any of these features also roll out to phones that have near tablet sized displays themselves, like the Nexus 6.

What do you think, will having a split keyboard or multiple locations for the notification shade make your Android use any better or easier on your Android M powered tablet?

Be sure to follow along all of our Android M coverage in our Diving into M series.

1
Jun

Project Abacus aims to get rid of all those passwords


Are you tired of typing in the same passwords over and over again? Well that’s your first mistake, in regards to using the same passwords. But seriously, passwords are becoming more and more frustrating, since just about everywhere requires some type of unique password just to check Reddit or your email, or Pinterest. Anyways, one of the many things introduced or announced at this year’s Google I/O was from the same team that is working on Project Ara (the modular phone).

Google’s ATAP team is working on a little project called Project Abacus, which is being developed to take some of the burden off of your brain when it comes to remembering your password. Project Abacus will eventually (hopefully) take over the traditional password as we know it, and will take a few different signals into account to determine whether it’s really you using your phone. This project will analyze the way you type, walk, and talk then use that data to determine who is using your phone.

So if someone that isn’t you is using your phone, Project Abacus will be able to tell the difference and immediately go through a series of security measures to ensure that your private and sometimes vital information, is protected. If executed correctly, with the influx of devices with fingerprint scanners, these phones will be able to feel like they’re a version of Fort Knox for your information, in the palm of your hand.

Now it hasn’t been mentioned exactly how this will be rolled out, or put into effect, or what kind of effect it will have on your password library. However it’s pretty darn cool to see what “smaller” projects the various divisions of Google are working on. We’ve already seen what ATAP has up their sleeves with Project Soli, Vault, and Jacquard, so go ahead and add Project Abacus to the list.

What do you think about what the ATAP team is hoping to do in regards to getting rid of the traditional password altogether? Is it a good move, bad move, or are you indifferent because you use a service such as 1Password or Dashlane to keep all of your passwords protected. Just as a friendly reminder, be sure to change or update your passwords at least once every six months. Just for the sake of security.

Source

 

The post Project Abacus aims to get rid of all those passwords appeared first on AndroidGuys.

1
Jun

Volvo’s On Call app can control your car from a smartwatch


Sure, you drive a Volvo and not an Aston Martin, but that doesn’t mean you can’t pretend to be a charming spy who controls his car with a high-tech watch. Volvo will soon release its On Call app for Android Wear devices and the Apple Watch, after all, and it comes with all the features its predecessors for tablets and smartphones have. That means you can poke around your arm candy to remotely lock or unlock the car’s doors, switch on the heater or air conditioner and check fuel and mileage. You can also ask it for help if your Volvo’s lost in a sea of cars in a parking lot. And just like the older apps, it quickly connects you to an operator, who then tracks your location through GPS, if your airbags get deployed. Volvo wrapped the smartwatch apps in a new design based on the Sensus connected interface, but you’ll have to wait until the end of June before you can give them a spin.

Filed under: Transportation, Wearables, Mobile, Apple, Google

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Via: Autoblog

Source: Volvo

31
May

Android Authority this week – May 31, 2015


google io 2015 aa (3 of 13)

Android fans, it was an amazingly busy week in the Googleverse. At its annual developer conference, Google introduced Android M, which brings few visual changes, but many much needed improvements and refinements, including doze mode, better volume controls, Android Pay, app state back up, and Google Now on Tap. It wasn’t just M; Photos is now an independent app; Project Brillo was announced as Google’s new IoT operating system; updates were announced for Inbox, Google Maps, and the Play Store; and Google ATAP blew our minds with its new projects – Jaquard, Soli, and Abacus. In other news Lenovo showed off some crazy concepts; Sony introduced the Xperia Z3+; the Galaxy S6 Iron Man edition launched; and Microsoft unveiled Cortana for Android.

Inside AA HQ

It probably won’t be a surprise that we spent this preparing for Google I/O, and from Thursday, in a mad dash to bring you all the news coming out of Google’s announcement-packed conference.

We’re all pretty excited to try out Android M, and most of the team is already rocking the M developer preview on various devices. Google only touched on a fraction of the changes and new features in Android M, and we’ve been busy perusing the developer previews to spot all the new stuff. To keep up with everything, check out our Diving into M series, where we take a closer look at the smaller new features in Android M.

Android M Easter Egg Lol watermark

Google I/O is over, but the tech world is still revving at full speed. This week, Darcy attended Lenovo’s TechWorld conference and over the next days he will be reporting from Taipei, where Computex is about to start. Computex has always been Asus’ stomping ground, and this year is no different. We expect to see the Zenwatch 2 and some updated tablets come next week.

In celebration of Google I/O, we’re giving away a Nexus 9! Get your ticket for our weekly giveaway from here.

The stuff you shouldn’t miss

Top news of the week

And here are the top news in the Android world this week:

Microsoft loves Android

hi-cortana

Xperia Z3+ is here

sony xperia z3 + plus press renders (6)

Galaxy S6 Iron Man edition has landed

samsung galaxy s6 edge iron man

Android M: everything to know

Android M Easter Egg 1 Watermark

More Google I/O news

google io 2015 aa (2 of 13)

Google ATAP epic projects

project jacquard

Lenovo TechWorld

Lenovo-TechWorld-2015-highlights-aa-(16-of16)

Sound off

We always want to hear your feedback. Whether it’s criticism or praise, feel free to tell us what you think about Android Authority’s content, design, and community. Comment here or get in touch with us on our social channels:

Happy Sunday!

31
May

Google Calendar won’t send you text alerts after June 27th


Google Calendar on a Nexus 9

We hope you didn’t lean too heavily on Google Calendar’s text message alerts in order to keep your life organized. Google is warning that Calendar’s SMS notifications will vanish for regular users (education, government and work are safe) after June 27th. The search firm argues that they’re no longer needed in an era when smartphones give you a “richer, more reliable” heads-up. It’s true that modern mobile devices render SMS a bit redundant. With that in mind, this isn’t good news if you can’t justify a smartphone on your budget, or prefer to keep most notifications off — you may remain blissfully unaware of an event change until you reach a computer.

[Thanks, Kristy]

Filed under: Cellphones, Internet, Mobile, Google

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Source: Google

31
May

Just so we’re clear, Android M won’t be Android Milkshake; but what will it be?






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When Google VP of Engineering Dave Burke was spotted at Google I/O 2015 with a milkshake themed watch face on his Android Wear smartwatch, the Android world lost their collective mind – is Android M going to be Android Milkshake? Since then, Burke has shot down the rumours, saying that Android M won’t be Android Milkshake, so unless he’s outright lying, we’re going to have to go back to guessing what the ‘M’ in Android M stands for.


Here’s a list of desserts we’ve come up with so far:

  • Marshmellow
  • Marzipan
  • Milk Chocolate
  • Mooncake
  • Mint

And if Google feels like cutting a deal with a confectionery maker again, we could have Android:

  • Mars
  • Malteaser
  • M&M

My personal favourite is Android M&M, but it’s probably a long shot. What do you think Android M’s official name is going to be? Let us know your suggestion in the comments below.

Source: Phone Arena

The post Just so we’re clear, Android M won’t be Android Milkshake; but what will it be? appeared first on AndroidSPIN.

31
May

Now that Google I/O 2015 is over, where was the new Moto 360?






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Rumours are never an exact science, but we like to think that rumours coupled with history make some pretty accurate predictions. Unfortunately, our predictions for an announcement of the new Moto 360 did not come true at Google I/O 2015 with the event winding up today, which poses the question: when are we going to see the new Moto 360? We had thought an announcement was imminent as a Motorola device codenamed BTMW03 visited Bluetooth SIG just two weeks ago – spin the clocks back one year, and a Motorola device codenamed BTMW01 visited Bluetooth SIG days before it was announced by Motorola, and took on a starring role at Google I/O 2014.


Here’s what else we think know so far. The new Moto 360 is internally codenamed “Smelt”, after the delta smelt species of fish – the original Moto 360 was codenamed “Minnow”, which is probably somewhat of a lingering artifact from Motorola’s time under Google. We’ve also had suggestions that the new Moto 360 would be announced “early” in 2015, but with June bearing down on us, “early” seems like it’s going out the door pretty quick. At this point, with many of our previous rumours fading away, we’re stumped as to when Motorola might be making an announcement for the new Moto 360, so we’ll just have to go back to being patient.

When do you think the new Moto 360 is going to be announced? Let us know your guess in the comments below.

The post Now that Google I/O 2015 is over, where was the new Moto 360? appeared first on AndroidSPIN.

30
May

Google’s Hiroshi Lockheimer on the present and future of Android and Chrome OS


Google's Hiroshi Lockheimer on the present and future of Android and Chrome OS

In 2005, software engineer Hiroshi Lockheimer got a call from Andy Rubin, his former boss at Danger Research, the creator of the Sidekick (aka Hiptop), the first truly web-savvy smartphone. Rubin was now at Google, which had recently acquired his new startup. Lockheimer was working on Internet TV software for Microsoft, after stops at Palm and Good Technology.

Hiroshi Lockheimer

“He knew my interest in consumer devices, and specifically wireless devices,” Lockheimer remembers. “He called me up and said, ‘Hey, you know, we’re doing this thing at Google now, we got acquired. I can’t really tell you what we’re doing, but I think you’re really going to be excited about it. You should come talk to us.’”

Lockheimer did talk to Rubin, and ended up joining Google in January 2006 to contribute to a new mobile operating system. It didn’t ship on a phone for nearly two years. But Lockheimer is still working on Android today as a Google VP of engineering, a position that includes oversight of both it and Chrome OS, the operating system that powers Chromebooks such as Google’s own Pixel.

Android as it appeared in 2007, long before the first Android phone shipped

On the eve of Google’s annual I/O developer conference, I visited Lockheimer at Google’s headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. to talk about the current state of Android and Chrome OS-and why Google thinks it’s logical, rather than inefficient, to have two operating systems.

A Billion Phones A Year, And More

The mystery project that Lockheimer joined Google to work on in 2006 is now by far the world’s dominant mobile operating system in terms of market share. Android shipped on more than a billion smartphones in 2014-and powers much of Google’s ever-expanding ambitions when it comes to consumer electronics of all sorts.

“I had no idea that this is where we would be nine-plus years later,” he says. “Maybe we should have been dreaming bigger dreams, but this has far exceeded my expectations, and it’s kind of really humbling, actually. I’m wearing a watch that’s running Android now. I have a TV set at home that’s running Android. I’m trying out cars that have Android running in them.”

Android TV running on a Sony HDTV

Even though Android still feels like it has plenty of new frontiers ahead of it, it’s also feeling increasingly mature: At this point, it’s an operating system without much in the way of glaring flaws or major missing features. You can see that in the slowing pace of big updates. The Cupcake, Donut, Eclair, Froyo, Gingerbread, and Honeycomb versions were released at breakneck speed over a total period of less than two years between 2009-2011. Today’s Android upgrades can still be substantial-last year’s Lollipop version introduced an extremely ambitious aesthetic makeover called Material Design-but they arrive at an iOS-like annual pace.

“As we’ve grown as a platform, we realize that to some extent predictability is important for the whole industry: developers, manufacturers, operators, and consumers, frankly,” Lockheimer explains. “So we’ve landed with sort of a yearly cadence of big releases, so, for instance, one year we release J, the next year we release K, and then the year after that L, and then this year we’ll launch M, and so you can predict what will happen next year.”

Android Wear in action

But he pushes back against any notion that it’s getting harder for Google to figure out how to improve Android. And its evolution isn’t just about putting it on new types of devices. “The trick is not to think about them in isolation,” Lockheimer says. “It’s really about thinking about these different screens, if you will, holistically. How do they work with each other? A watch, and a phone, and a TV, and a car, and a tablet, how can they coordinate, and how can they actually enrich our lives, and make things that were harder before more useful?”

He provides an example: “Before you get in your car, maybe you’re planning your trip, you’re planning whatever restaurant you’re going to, and you do this on your computer, at your home or at your office. Then you get into your car, and then you have to do that search all over again to find the address, and put it into your car.”

“Well, shouldn’t your car know that you just looked this thing up, and guess that that’s probably where you’re going to want to go? These are things that we can now enable by having a common platform.”

A Less Fractured Operating System

Android’s defining characteristic-as conveyed in its “Be together. Not the same” ad campaign-is that it’s available on a multitude of devices from hardware makers who can tweak it to their liking. For years, most of them did a lot of tweaking, not always to the operating system’s benefit. Recently, though, major phones such as Samsung’s Galaxy S6 have used it in something closer to its unvarnished state. I asked Lockheimer for his thoughts on this trend away from customization for customization’s sake.

Samsung’s Galaxy S6

“As part of my job, I do meet with many of our partners, including manufacturers and operators and so on, and silicon vendors and the whole stack,” he told me. “And I have noticed the same thing, which is that the manufacturers seem to have reached a new type of equilibrium around the customization that they do on top of Android. One of the core principles of Android has been, it’s open source, and amenable for manufacturer differentiation. We didn’t want to build an operating system where the manufacturers just didn’t have a way to differentiate, because we didn’t think that would help adoption. I’m talking about 10 years ago, nine years ago.”

Material Design-a defining aesthetic not just for Android but for Google products in general-has left hardware makers less inclined to put their own stamp on Android, Lockheimer says. “Manufacturers realize that design has a name, and it has a name because it’s a big, huge investment from Google and the developer ecosystem rallying around this one design guideline. We’ve worked very closely with their design teams and update them on roadmaps and take their feedback, so that they’re a part of the process, so that they feel invested in it. I think it’s been a huge success for us.”

New Bosses, New Responsibilities

Lockheimer was once part of a triumvirate that ran Android, along with Rubin and Hugo Barra. It was dissolved in 2013, when Rubin stepped down as the operating system’s chief and Barra left Google for Chinese smartphone kingpin Xiaomi. Now the OS falls into the large percentage of Google operations reporting to senior VP Sundar Pichai, along with search, Gmail, Chrome, Apps, Maps, Google+, and more.

When I asked Lockheimer about his working relationship with Pichai, he didn’t explicitly contrast it with the Rubin era. But he did describe an organization that isn’t siloed off from other Google offerings and corporate goals. “We don’t really talk about org charts, per se,” he says. “We talk about what are the products that we want to build, and then we get into the details-‘Okay, what is the best way in which to build those products’-but it always starts with the first principle, which is great user experiences.”

In October of last year, another round of reorganization put Lockheimer in charge of Chrome OS as well as Android, bringing Google’s operating systems closer together than ever before. The move led some observers to wonder if Google intended some sort of unification of the two OSes. Lockheimer, not surprisingly, isn’t talking about any such plan-which, with Android devices selling by the billion and Chromebooks doing well in niches such as K-12 education, doesn’t feel like an urgent matter in any case.

Google’s Chromebook Pixel

Instead, he emphasizes the value of having different platforms for different sorts of devices. “At some very base level, an operating system is an operating system,” he says. “There’s silicon and there’s software, and those two things need to talk to each other. But where they do start to diverge-or maybe specialize is a better word-is as you get closer and closer to the user experience.” Laptop-style Chromebooks, for instance, have always paid attention to keyboard shortcuts; touchscreen-oriented Android devices, not so much.

Still, with the OSes under joint management, it’s easier to share knowledge-which is helpful even in the case of keyboard shortcuts, now that more people are using Android tablets with Bluetooth keyboards. Implementing support for technology standards can be done with both Android and Chrome OS in mind: As Lockheimer puts it, “Wi-Fi is Wi-Fi.” And bringing the teams closer makes it easier to implement cross-platform features such as the ability to use an Android phone to unlock a Chromebook.

Toward the end of our conversation, I asked Lockheimer how much time he spent thinking about Android’s and Chrome OS’s future past the next release or two, and what they might look like a few years from now. I thought I was giving him an opportunity to wax eloquent on pie-in-the-sky stuff. Instead, he stayed practical, and said that developing operating systems can’t be done in isolation from the components they use and the devices they’ll run on. Running engineering for these two operating systems requires him to think about everything from chips to merchandising.

“It’s not just the technology,” he told me. “It’s about the go-to-market. It’s about the retail. It’s about the manufacturing. It’s about the chipsets. What are the capabilities of a display two years from now? Maybe there are new technologies that are in the roadmap for a display company, and maybe we can incorporate those things.”

“It’s a very wide view that we need to take, and I try my best to do that.”

Filed under: Software, Google

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