Google believes its efforts to increase encryption have worked in their favor
Google Chairman Eric Schmidt who was speaking at the annual BoxDev event, mentioned that the company’s efforts in improving encryption of its products have worked greatly since the Snowden leaks.
Ex-NSA contractor Edward Snowden made several allegations about the federal government illegally surveilling its citizens. This came as a shock to the tech companies, including Google, who have since amped up their encryption to ensure that their data isn’t accessed.
Schmidt believes that government agencies shouldn’t have access to user data without a prior warrant. He also says that encryption of its products will also help in overcoming censorship imposed for its products by countries like China.
Having products encrypted makes it near impossible for federal agencies to access data. However, if the government sees the need to get information about something, they can do so by taking proper legal actions. It’s good to see that a major company like Google is taking a stand against surveillance, which could provide inspiration to other companies as well.
Via: Tech Crunch
Come comment on this article: Google believes its efforts to increase encryption have worked in their favor
5 Android apps you shouldn’t miss this week! – Android Apps Weekly
brightcove.createExperiences();
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Welcome back to Android Apps Weekly! Here are the headlines from this last week:
- A woman claimed her account was hacked and is suing Google for allegedly unauthorized in-app purchases that apparently cost her thousands of dollars. According to court documents, her account was charged 650 times and she managed to not notice the money missing or receive any of the emails you always get when you buy things.
- A new Humble Bundle is out now and includes 10 titles from Tin Man Games. You can pay whatever you want and get four titles, pay the average and get four additional titles. For a flat $9, you get all ten games. It’s a great way to get some awesome games on the cheap.
- A new study came out to show the Q1 numbers for both Google Play and the Apple App Store. As per the norm, Google Play has more apps and more app downloads but iOS continues to lead in overall revenue. Nothing new here, but it is the latest stat sheet and we don’t expect it to change anytime soon.
- Some developers in Italy who call themselves OrangeSec managed to port Cortana to Android. There are a lot of limitations including no offline mode and it’s only it’s Italian, but it’s still Cortana’s backend that’s being accessed. We imagine Microsoft will shut it down eventually but it’s still fun to see.
- In a blog post released earlier this week, Adobe has officially promised to support Android better in the future. Adobe has Android apps but their more innovative creations have remained iOS exclusives and that is about to change. We can expect to see some progress on this over the summer of this year.
For more Android apps and games releases, headlines, and updates, don’t forget to check out this week’s newsletter where we round up all of the apps news from the last week. If you’re so inclined, you can also sign up using your email to get this news delivered directly to your inbox every single week.
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Android for Work
[Price: Free]
Google has released the official Android for Work application. Obviously you’ll need to have Android for Work on the web to make this work but it’s nice to see it available for mobile devices and tablets. The compatibility is a bit limited, but you should be able to find all of the tools there including contacts, calendar, downloads, the office suite, and email. It also includes the hallmark admin control of Android for Work.

Servicely
[Price: Free / $2.16]
Servicely is a root application developed by Francisco Franco. The app allows you to identify, control, and shut off processes that may be draining your battery while you’re not using your device. It’s similar to Greenify but works more efficiently to keep tasks shut off so they don’t keep your phone awake when it shouldn’t be. There is a pro version that you can access for free and then donate later if you want to. We think you should.

Tiny Guardians
[Price: $3.99 with in-app purchases]
Tiny Guardians is a tower defense style game that was released to relatively positive reviews this last week. Like your typical tower defense games, your goal is to guard against waves of bad guys. Unlike tower defense games, Tiny Guardians doesn’t have any towers. You controls guardians that must defeat all the bad guys and you lose if your strategy doesn’t work out and your guardians die. It’s a unique concept that could be a lot of fun.
Hello Caller ID and Blocking
[Price: Free]
Hello is a new application from Facebook that acts as a dialer app for their Facebook Messenger service. Messenger has had calls for a while but now has a dedicated interface to access them. On top of working with Facebook’s service, you can automatically block calls, get free calls and texts over Messenger, and integration with your phone contacts and Facebook. It does work like a regular phone dialer with your number if you need that.
Mortal Kombat X
[Price: Free with in-app purchases]
The long awaited Mortal Kombat X is here, kind of! The game has made its way to the Google Play Store but it has only been soft-launched in select markets ostensibly for testing purposes. We don’t know when it will roll out to everyone but it is here and that means it’s coming very soon. Mortal Kombat X features a whole bunch of your favorite MK characters along with classic tropes from the series like fatalities. It should be a lot of fun once it’s fully released.
Wrap up
If we missed any great Android apps or games news, let us know about it in the comments!
Luxottica CEO says company is working on Google Glass 2.0
When Nest CEO Tony Fadell took over Google Glass back in February, he pledged to redesign the headset “from scratch.” Well, it looks like that process is well underway. In a company meeting today, Luxottica CEO Massimo Vian said the Italian eyewear company is working with the folks in Mountain View on not one, but two new versions of the device. Luxottica owns brands Ray-Ban and Oakley, and if you’ll recall, the company worked with Google on frames for the original version of Glass.
“What you saw was version 1,” Vian said. “We’re now working on version 2, which is in preparation.”
Vian also explained that a third version is in the works, and there are currently “second thoughts” on what it’ll look like. Aside from the promised redesign, details are scarce on the new model(s), besides reports that it’ll be powered by Intel and aim to be what Google’s Eric Schmidt calls “ready for users.” Speaking of Intel, Luxottica has its own product in the works with the chip maker that’s set to debut in 2016.
[Image credit: Joel Saget/AFP/Getty Images
Filed under: Wearables, Google
Source: Wall Street Journal
Google reveals Nexus program has “seen a decline”

In a time when low-priced handsets were generally equated with less-than-impressive specs, the LG Nexus 4 arrived on scene, shaking up our expectations for ‘budget priced’ offerings. Since then, we’ve seen a number of OEMs undertake a similar quest to offer us excellent Android experiences without paying typical flagship prices.
While the Nexus 5 and Nexus 7 (2012 and 2013) continued Google’s low-price-high-spec mission, their most recent Nexus offerings have gone down a very different path. Instead, the Nexus 6 and Nexus 9 give us bleeding edge specs with fewer compromises and more upscale aesthetics. Another big difference between the Nexus 6 and its smartphone predecessors is that the former has seen a much bigger carrier push than ever before.

So how’s this new direction treating Google? According to Google CFO Patrick Pichette during the company’s Q1 2015 earnings call, it seems that the Nexus program is seeing some decline in performance.
As a little background, the Nexus sales are part of a category called “other revenues”, alongside other Play Store (Now Google Store) products. The “other revenues” category was up 23 percent year over year, reaching $1.8 billion, but that revenue was down 3 percent compared to the fourth quarter of 2014. While that might not sound bad for Nexus all, Pichette noted that the year over year increase was driven by
While that might not sound bad for Nexus all, Pichette noted that the year over year increase was driven by growth of the Play Store, “offset by decline in Nexus, and the currency fluctuations. Year over year it hasn’t been as strong given the strength of the Nexus 7 last year.”
Does that mean the Nexus 6 and Nexus 9 have been unsuccessful?

It’s easy to take the news of a “declining sales of the Nexus” as a sign that Google shouldn’t have abandoned its low-price-high-spec mission, and while I absolutely loved this direction personally (as a N7 and N5 owner), it’s probably not as simple as that.
First off, we can’t say what’s responsible for this slow down. Pricing seems like an obvious factor, but the reality is that the Nexus 6 and Nexus 9’s form factors were a bit more niche than the 5-inch Nexus phone and 7-inch Nexus tablet released in 2013. The size of the displays could just as easily attributed to the less fervent reception. Personally, I would have paid premium pricing for a 5 to 5.5-inch Nexus, but have yet to make a switch to the Nexus 6 for fear it’s just too big for my own tastes.

It’s also important to remember that Pichette doesn’t mention the Nexus 5, only saying that performance isn’t as good as the Nexus 7 (2013). In a time when tablets were seeing substantial growth, the Nexus 7 (2012 and 2013) were excellent, low-cost options that helped really make the 7-inch category grow in popularity. Since that time, most consumers that want a tablet already have one, or have switched to a large screen (phablet) device as an alternative. Considering the fact tablets are a secondary device, existing tablet owners are less likely to upgrade yearly, and many tablet owners keep these devices for several years.
Bottom-line, even if the Nexus 5 and Nexus 7 had continued on with 2014 refreshes, there’s no guarantee that we’d be seeing any different results from the Nexus program. We really don’t have enough data to say if returning to their former direction would be positive, negative, or result in similar numbers now that the tablet market is slowing down a bit.
Nexus videos
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With all that out of the way, I personally believe that pricing did play a big factor, it just may not have been the only factor. What do you think?
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Google Easter Egg or hoax? There’s an Android pissing on the Apple logo in Google Maps
Google has been know for some pretty clever Easter Eggs, but if what I am about to tell you is yet another one, Google may have crossed the line. If you open Google Maps and go to an area near Rawalpindi, Pakistan (link below), you will find our lovable bugdroid pissing on the Apple logo.
Would Google do this? I highly doubt it as it’s probably some manipulation using Map Maker. Whomever it is, has to be happy with themselves because they definitely made some noise this morning. Speaking of noise…….Is that Larry Page’s phone ringing? “Hello Larry, this is Tim Cook……” You can finish the rest.
source: Google Maps
via: Team Android
Come comment on this article: Google Easter Egg or hoax? There’s an Android pissing on the Apple logo in Google Maps
Google admits that Nexus devices aren’t selling so well, but that’s not what they said 3 months ago
Well how things can change in 3 months time. In an earnings conference call back in January, Google CFO Patrick Pichette stated that they couldn’t keep up with Nexus 6 demand. That implied that the demand was so unbelievably high, but as we have learned with supply and demand, even if demand is low, supply could still be an issue. When I reported that story, I titled the post….They have to be kidding: Google admits they can’t keep up with Nexus 6 demand….because it was obvious that the Nexus 6 couldn’t be selling that well.
Fast forward three months to yesterday and Patrick Pichette is singing a different tune. He is now saying that there has been a “decline in Nexus” year over year. He didn’t call out any specific device so it doesn’t mean the Nexus 6 is the culprit. The Nexus 6 is probably part of the issue becsause I seriously doubt the Nexus 9 is lighting any fires either. The Nexus 6 is priced $300 over ($649 vs $349) what the Nexus 5 went for and the Nexus 9 is a big square 4:3 tablet that is also overpriced. There is also the Nexus Player, but let’s not even talk about that because those sales figures have to represent no more than a pimple on someone’s ass.
Here’s his full statement…
“Other revenues grew 23 percent year over year to $1.8 billion, but were down 2 percent quarter over quarter, driven really by year over year growth in the Play Store, offset by decline in Nexus, and the currency fluctuations. Year over year it hasn’t been as strong given the strength of the Nexus 7 last year.”
I have been saying it for a long time and I know I am in the minority for Android hardcores, but the Nexus line has always been overrated. Everyone goes gaga over stock Android, but it’s just as buggy as anything else. In fact, I don’t think I have ever had a great experience with any Nexus device. They are supposed to be reference devices, but the batteries and cameras generally suck on them as well.
source: 9to5Google
Come comment on this article: Google admits that Nexus devices aren’t selling so well, but that’s not what they said 3 months ago
Google and Facebook come out against government spying
The Department of Homeland Security is setting up shop in Silicon Valley, with secretary of state Jeh Johnson pushing for easier access to our private data. Naturally, both Google and Facebook have started to openly resist this call to create backdoors for state surveillance. At the RSA security conference, Google’s Keith Enright told MIT Technology Review that any attempt to breach his company’s encryption would harm civil liberties.
The search engine’s privacy chief went on to say that if operatives use backdoors to access your data, they’re that much more likely not to bother getting a warrant. Instead, Google has pledged to “drive as much transparency for law enforcement access as possible.”
His words were echoed by Facebook’s Erin Egan, who said that “the trust of the people that use our services is paramount,” and that anything that goes against that “we’re not going to be okay with.” It’s a sentiment shared by Mark Zuckerberg, who has previously gone on the record to criticize the NSA’s PRISM program.
Oh, and here’s something that’s always worth mentioning when an official says that they need backdoor access to encrypted data. When asked, FBI Director James Comey couldn’t cite a single example of how encryption had obstructed an ongoing investigation. So, there’s no actual proof that such access is required, and it’s already been shown that said privilege is routinely abused.
[Image Credit: AFP/Getty Images]
Filed under: Internet, Google, Facebook
Source: MIT Technology Review, (2)
An Android is urinating on the Apple logo in Google Maps
Google and Apple have always had their differences, but a new Easter egg inside Google Maps has just taken their rivalry to a whole new level. As spotted by Team Android, if you head to these coordinates with the regular Map view enabled, you’ll see Google’s iconic Android mascot taking a leak on the Apple logo. At the moment, it’s unclear who created this little piece of mischief and whether Google is even aware of its existence. It could have been made by a renegade Google employee, or a member of the public using a crowdsourced mapping tool like Map Maker. Regardless, it’s a crazy (and pretty hilarious) addition that’s sure to rile some of the employees in Cupertino. Shots fired!
Filed under: Internet, Apple, Google
Via: Team Android
Source: Google Maps
Oh no, they didn’t! A giant Android pees on Apple in Google Maps

Step 1. Go to this location in Google Maps. Step 2a. Enjoy. Step 2b. Cringe.
We’re not sure what’s going on here, as what you see in the screenshot above should never make it to production software. No matter what happened (intentional Easter Egg, joke of rogue employee, some exploit or hack, passive aggressive revenge over Apple dumping Google Maps), it will probably be gone very soon.
Sending directions to your phone is as simple as a Google search

Google is making the process of sending route directions from your PC to your phone simpler. Much simpler.
You know how it goes – for one reason or another you decide to look up directions to a location on your computer. All is good until you’re out and about and you have to search for the same directions again on your smartphone. That’s just wasted time and Google hates that, so it’s adding a new feature to Google Search to quickly send directions from your computer to your phone.
Just type in “send directions” in Google Search and you will be shown a simple interface that lets you pick the place you want to get to. Your phone’s location is automatically selected as the starting point, though you can change it to any place you wish. After you enter the destination, just click “Send directions to my phone” and the route will load up in Google Maps on your device. Nifty!
The feature seems to be active in the US, though we couldn’t get it to work in Europe at the moment of this writing. But there’s no reason for Google not to roll this feature out globally, so it’s likely just a matter of time. “Send directions” joins “find my phone,” another location-related feature that is now accessible from Google Search.
Can you “send directions” yet? Sound like a useful feature for you?










