Android Authority this week – May 31, 2015

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.

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
- Roundup: Interested in a budget device? Check out our top Android recommendations for under $200
- Tech talk: Gary Sims weighs in on the issue of multi-core usage of Android apps
- Feature: Ever wondered what it’s like inside a smartphone factory? Wonder no more
- Tech talk: Native or HTML5: Obaro gives you the pros and cons
- Video: These are the top features of Android M
- Video: Joe Hindy gives his hands-on impressions of Android M
Top news of the week
And here are the top news in the Android world this week:
Microsoft loves Android

- Microsoft announces Cortana app for Android
- Microsoft to push its cross-platform apps with Windows 10 phone companion
- Microsoft partners with LG, Sony and 18 other OEMs to bring Office apps to more Android tablets
Xperia Z3+ is here

- Sony launches Xperia Z3+: same as Japan’s Xperia Z4, almost the same as Xperia Z3
- Sony explains why the Z4 was rebranded to the Xperia Z3+
Galaxy S6 Iron Man edition has landed

- The Galaxy S6 Edge Iron Man edition has landed, check out the unboxing video
- (Update: $35,600!) Galaxy S6 Edge Iron Man Edition going for a truly intergalactic price
Android M: everything to know

- Google officially announces Android M, preview coming today!
- Google is bringing granular app permissions control to Android M
- Android M introduces doze mode and USB Type C support
- Chrome Custom Tabs lets you use Chrome as your app browser
- Android M supports fingerprint authentication for use with new Android Pay system and other apps
- Android M will bring Google Now on Tap
- Android M Developer Preview images are live!
- Android M to feature automatic app data backup
- Google plans regular updates to Android M preview, the first coming in a month
More Google I/O news

- Google I/O keynote roundup: all the announcements in one place
- Missed something at Google I/O 2015? Re-watch the full keynote here!
- Project Brillo is Google’s new Internet of Things OS
- No invite required for Inbox by Gmail anymore, new features added
- Google Photos officially unveiled at Google I/O 2015
- Fully-featured offline features coming to Google Maps
- Autoplay, queuing, second screen and multiplayer gaming comes to the Chromecast
Google ATAP epic projects

- Google ATAP aims to bring touch-sensitive clothing to the mainstream with Project Jacquard
- Project Vault is a security system on a microSD card
- Google ATAP’s Project Soli will make interacting with wearables a breeze
- Project Ara put together on stage, shown off as fully working
Lenovo TechWorld

- Lenovo VR Goggles announced, takes on Samsung and Oculus
- Lenovo announces Lenovo Cast streaming device
- Lenovo shows off dual-screen Magic View concept smartwatch
- Lenovo unveils concept smartphone with laser projector
Sound off
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Happy Sunday!
‘Halo 3: ODST’ is rolling out on the Xbox One, check your inbox

From one bug-ridden console game to another — Halo: Master Chief Collection owners should check their Xbox One inbox this morning, as redemption codes for the Halo 3: ODST add-on are rolling out now. Arriving as an apology for problems gamers have reported with the massive Halo bundle since it launched months ago, ODST is a simpler update instead of a remake, with all the original graphics but running at 1080p and 60fps, and without the co-op Firefight mode. There’s also an update, that adds Halo 2: Anniversary map “Remnant” to the bundle and makes a few additional tweaks. Halo Senior Communications Manager Rob Semsey confirmed the rollout on Twitter, so if you played the game between November 11th and December 19th last year expect a message.
Filed under: Gaming, HD, Microsoft
Source: Rob Semsey (Twitter), Halo Waypoint
Dolby Digital Plus surround sound plugs into Microsoft’s Edge
Windows 10 won’t have Media Center included but this week Microsoft revealed that it will have support for surround sound in some new ways, and it could make Netflix streaming even better. Beyond supporting Dolby Digital Plus in the Windows 10 OS — similar to Windows 8 — its Edge browser (formerly known as Project Spartan) will be the first one with built-in support for the surround sound audio codec. Microsoft and Dolby are explaining to developers how they can not only create 5.1 audio mixes for content, but also include the code to make it fall back to stereo on other we browsers.
Even if you don’t have a home stereo hooked up to your PC or tablet, the two claim that Windows 10’s support for Dolby Digital Plus portable mode will make for louder and clearer audio played back via laptop speakers or headphones. Netflix isn’t mentioned by name, but this support could bring surround sound streaming through the web browser with those new media extensions, something it doesn’t currently support on Silverlight or HTML5. On PCs it does support surround sound via the Windows 8 app, but another option couldn’t hurt, and after five years of waiting we’re more than ready for it to arrive.
[Image credit: Tomasz WyszoÅmirski]
Filed under: Home Entertainment, HD, Microsoft
5 Android Apps you shouldn’t miss this week! – Android Apps Weekly
Sponsored by: Anytime Gallery for Wear
[Price: Free / $1.99]
Anytime Gallery for Wear is a gallery application that allows you to sync photos between your phone and your Android Wear smartwatch. In the free version you can sync up to 20 photos and if you go premium, you’ll be able to sync an unlimited number of photos. It’s a simple app that seems to work well and even includes support for pinch to zoom on the Android Wear device. It’s a fun little app and a great way to see your pictures on your wrist. Give it a try and show your support for Android Apps Weekly!

Here are your headlines from this week!
- Last week we talked about the latest Humble Bundle. This week, as a gift, anyone who gets the Artifex Mundi Humble Bundle will also receive Steam keys for Mac, Windows, and Linux so you can play on mobile or on your computer. It’s still a nice way to give to charity and a good way to get some cheap games.
- An interesting new development may add Quick Reply functionality to any messaging based notification. Developer MohammadAG is working on a root-free app that will add Quick Reply functionality to almost anything without you being required to do anything. It’s not out yet but it looks very promising.
- Microsoft did a whole bunch of things this last week so we’re going to group them all together. They announced a Windows 10 companion app that will help you sync your Android phone to your Windows 10 computer for improved functionality. They also announced an app called Microsoft OneClip that will be a cross-platform clipboard app which could be nice. Cortana for Android has been officially announced although there is no release date yet. Lastly, Microsoft announced a partnership with 18 OEMs that will see Microsoft Office pre-installed on tablets.
For even more Android apps and games news, updates, and releases, don’t forget to check out this week’s newsletter. There we have the complete list of everything that’s happened this last week. If you’re so inclined, you can also sign up with your email address and we’ll beam this info to you every single Friday.
Subscribe to our Android Apps Weekly newsletter!
FORM Watch Face
[Price: Free]
First up this week is FORM Watch Face and this is probably the most ridiculous Android Wear watch face of all time. It’s developed by the same guy who brought us Muzei Live Wallpaper. It works like this. The watch face will display whatever background is on your phone to your watch. Then it will let pretty much any Android Wear watch face sit on top of that. It’s a nifty idea and totally free to use.

Google Spotlight Stories
[Price: Free with in-app purchases]
Google Spotlight Stories actually isn’t new because it used to be a Motorola-specific app. This is actually a storytelling application that lets you view immersive short stories using 360-degree video, 2D, and 3D animations. You can buy additional stories if you want and it really does bring something special to the table. Beware that not all devices are supported but it is free to download.

Periscope
[Price: Free]
You may have seen this already if you watched our best Android apps and games from May 2015. Periscope is a live video streaming app released by Twitter. It allows you to stream live from your smartphone camera to all of your Twitter followers. You can also watch old streams, stream privately, and it enjoys full integration with Twitter. It’s an interesting app that does things a little bit different.

Microsoft Hyperlapse
[Price: Free]
Microsoft Hyperlapse is an interesting camera application that helps you create stop-motion videos. It actually came out last week but we couldn’t try it out because of the lack of device compatibility. This week it got some more devices added to the list. If you want to try it out, you’ll have to become a tester on Google+ and then download it. It’s a pretty fun little app and worth a shot. You can learn how to do it here.
Playboy NOW
[Price: Free]
Last up is a new app from Playboy called Playboy Now. Despite its namesake, the app actually contains hardly any nudity and is pretty much safe for work. It’s actually a news app that gives you updates on celebrities, night life, and other activities and events one might read about from Playboy. That said it does still carry a Mature 17+ rating in the Play Store. It’s worth a shot if you like Playboy.

Wrap up
If we missed any important Android apps or games news, tell us about it in the comments! Do note that next week will be a special Google I/O episode, so stay tuned for that!
Lenovo’s Windows 10 devices will get unique Cortana features
Microsoft’s chatty Cortana is one of the more well-liked parts of Windows Phone, and Lenovo is making it more versatile on its own PCs with ReachIt. It exploits the voice assistant to find your own photos, documents and email across multiple Lenovo Windows 10 PCs, tablets, and even cloud services like OneDrive or Dropbox. The app is personalized with a user-specific Lenovo ID, letting you search for content on, say, your Lenovo laptop remotely from a ThinkPad tablet. It also uses location services, helping you locate a file by making a vague request like “Cortana, find the picture I worked on at Starbucks last week,” according to Lenovo.
Microsoft’s Cortana search will also arrive to any PC once Windows 10 comes out. However, Lenovo has extended its capability a bit with ReachIt, letting it search your personal info across several devices; provided they’re from Lenovo, we’d assume. We’re wondering if Microsoft might do something similar — the ability to search your PC from Cortana using an Android and iOS device would be pretty handy.
Filed under: Desktops, Laptops, Lenovo
Source: Lenovo
Seattle Symphony uses Kinect to conduct robotic instruments

Microsoft might have scaled back its ambitions for Kinect, but creative modders and developers are still finding ways to put the peripheral to good use. Conductor Ludovic Morlot used the device to control three “kinetic” instruments — a robotic grand piano, 24-reedhorn sculpture and custom concert chimes — as part of an intimate Seattle Symphony performance on May 1st. During the 22-minute composition, Morlot could start, stop and control the volume of the instruments with gestures. Making a fist in different places let him select the unusual instruments, while waving the other hand up and down would change the amplification. The system was devised by Trimpin, a kinectic sculptor, sound artist and musician, and will remain in the Benaroya Hall so that visitors can try it for themselves. Microsoft seems to have given up on its second-gen Kinect, but mods like this are a reminder of its untapped potential. Between this concert, a weird musical sandbox and a Nine Inch Nails festival tour, it seems to have a small future in the music industry.
Source: Kinect for Windows
Microsoft’s imaging technology can automatically caption photos
Microsoft’s already demonstrated how its computer vision technology can recognize objects even better than humans, now it’s onto the next frontier: Interpreting elements of a photo and automatically generating captions. That may not exactly sound exciting, but being able to accurately explain an image could be essential for artificial intelligence. It’s also yet another sign of the power of neural networks, or computer models that try to mimic the way the human brain works. Microsoft’s technology starts by identifying everything in an image, then it generates sentences around how those objects interact. For example, in the image above it came up with “A purple camera with a woman”; “A woman holding a camera in a crowd”; and “A woman holding a cat.” Two of those sentences don’t make much sense — it somehow identifies a bundle of hair as a cat — so it eventually settled on “A woman holding a camera in a crowd” as the best way to describe the scene.
“We want to connect vision to language because we want to have artificial intelligence tools,” Margaret Mitchell, a researcher at Microsoft Research’s natural language processing group, said in a blog post today. The technology could lead to a future version of Microsoft’s Cortana virtual assistant that can view the world around you and offer helpful tips on the fly, not unlike the Cortana character in Halo.
‘Batman: Arkham Knight’ is a fun distraction, but it’s not Batman
Neon green and red lights flash as Batman maneuvers the Batmobile through loop de loops in a gaudy underground racetrack. On the streets of Gotham, giant, bulbous tanks strafe around each other shooting at the speeding Bat-vehicle as it tries to escape. Onscreen, a computer-animated Alfred appears and gets snippy with master Bruce.
This is a description of the things I did in a demo of Rocksteady’s Batman: Arkham Knight, due out this June on PlayStation 4, Xbox One and PC. And if any of the above sounds a whole hell of a lot like the camp film Batman & Robin, well, that’s because it’s eerily similar. If you were a fan of that Joel Schumacher-directed 1997 nipple fest or the open-world distractions of the 2011 video game Arkham City, then that gameplay might sound pretty awesome. But for a fan of Batman: Arkham Asylum like myself, however, this sample of Arkham Knight was disconcerting.

Commissioner James Gordon remains remarkably understanding of his peers.
For its new entry in the series, Arkham Knight, developer Rocksteady chose to double down on the open-world exploration of predecessor Arkham City, giving players an expanded metropolis and a souped-up Bat-vehicle to explore it with. The face-lift that open world’s received on the new PlayStation 4 hardware is truly impressive. The streets, thugs and heroes of Arkham Knight glisten with detail and reflected light. Batman’s dank, wet world is gloriously represented even if it feels like you’ve been on these streets before. In fact, if Gotham seems overwhelmingly familiar when you start playing, that’s because the city, though significantly bigger, does indeed borrow architecture from the last game.
That familiarity isn’t a bad thing, though, as continuity between Batman’s video game adventures should enhance the fantasy that you actually are the Caped Crusader. This is his city and while it should change — especially after the middle of town was converted into a freaky prison colony in the last outing — it shouldn’t be wildly different every time.
The Batmobile, which has both destructive and acrobatic panache, lends a perspective absent from the previous games. Where most of Arkham City had players using grappling hooks to swing around and glide through the city’s rooftops, Arkham Knight keeps players grounded in the Batmobile. Unfortunately, that decision to constrain Batman to the streets also seems to have opened the door to some truly Schumacherian missions (sadly devoid of sexual innuendo) for Batman to complete while joyriding.

How does the Riddler afford all these underground racetracks?
I got to indulge in three Batmobile-centric mission types in the demo: bomb disposal, Riddler racing (seriously) and a chase sequence where I tried to catch the jetpack-rocking villain Firebug. To Rocksteady’s credit, all three were pretty entertaining.
In the first mission, the Arkham Knight (as the game’s villain is called) has sprinkled bombs throughout the city that Batman must diffuse by attaching a wire to them (with the Batmobile) and uploading a virus. He then has to defend that secured bomb from neon red-tinged robot tanks while the virus uploads. The whole thing feels more like a version of Battlezone, the 1980 arcade game, if it were made by Daft Punk. The Riddler races, meanwhile, feel like Mario Kart built by an insane person and set in a city sewer system. Which is more or less precisely what’s happened here: The Riddler has you try to beat a course time while you drive up walls and make tricky jumps underground.
Are these Batmobile-specific diversions entertaining? Sure! But when you’re riding the elevator back up from the Riddler’s subterranean fun times, it’s hard not to wonder what the hell any of that has to do with being Batman. Is Rocksteady attempting to ape the goofy Batman of the ’50s comics? If that’s the case, then why is everything all neon counterpointed with shadows and grit? Why have a tank fight at all?

The tag-team fights add a welcome spin on the series’ brawling.
The Firebug chases at least feel more true to Batman’s spirit. Those missions have players driving up to a burning building and then chasing the high-tech arsonist as he tries to escape. Trying to drive around tight city corners so you can get close enough to launch yourself out of the Batmobile, tackle Firebug and beat the crap out of him feels absolutely awesome. It’s also irritatingly open-world-game-specific, though. Since it’s a type of mission, players have to chase Firebug multiple times to complete that side story.
The Riddler races feel like Mario Kart built by an insane person and set in a city sewer system.
Therein lies the greatest problem with Arkham Knight’s shift from the tightly wound exploration of the original to the now Grand Theft Auto-esque open world: The game rarely feels momentous. Every one of these missions feels like so much filler; distractions to give you something to do as you Bat around town. The Firebug mission would be so much more exciting if it was just one specific incident; one big showdown rather than a chore that needs to be repeated over and over again. Batman: Arkham Knight‘s story may deliver the big, enunciated moments I crave, but unfortunately it was off-limits in the demo.
The series’ signature chunky fighting, at least, still feels great in Arkham Knight. Characters like Nightwing can be accessed on the fly by tapping the controller’s shoulder button. (note: Nightwing takes off after the fight, though, so these team-ups are temporary.) As in Arkham City, however, the whole of Gotham’s littered with random henchmen looking for a fight. So while you’ll always have something to do, keep in mind the brawling will be revisited ad nauseam, meaning more repetition of similar goals, as well as fewer distinctive set pieces and special places to explore.

Sadly, Uma Thurman doesn’t play Poison Ivy this time out.
It bears repeating that everything I did in this demo was fun. The races, the bomb disposal: They were perfectly entertaining. The production quality’s not what eats away at Batman’s latest video game adventure. Everything in Arkham Knight feels like it’s expertly made, but also indistinct.
I’d just rather have a flawed Arkham Asylum than a high-quality open world of distractions any day of the week.
[Images credit: WBIE]
Microsoft is adding a headset port to Xbox One controllers
Even though the Xbox One controller has earned many plaudits, one thing universally hated is the lack of a headphone port. So far the best solution has been to buy the $24.99 Xbox One Stereo Headset Adapter, but even that’s not without its problems. Although it won’t be much consolation to gamers that already bought the adapter, Microsoft is going to release a refreshed controller this June with a 3.5mm port built in.
The news comes via Microsoft’s own support site, which says the port (number 16 on the diagram above) will feature on “controllers released after June 2015.” It also notes that only “compatible” 3.5mm audio devices can be connected to this port. Chances are you’ll be able to hear audio through any headphones, but there will be some headset mics that won’t work due to the pointlessly different way manufacturers order the conductors on their jacks. The PlayStation 4, and many phones, suffer from the same issue, so that’s not really something Microsoft can control.
Filed under: Gaming, Microsoft
Via: Windows Central, SilentDisco (NeoGAF)
Source: Xbox One Support
Microsoft’s new Windows Store policy will combat junk apps
It’s no secret that Windows Store has serious issues not just with scammy apps, but also with spammy ones. Now, Microsoft is finally addressing that problem by introducing a stricter certification policy for new and existing apps that could clean its catalog enough to make browsing the store less painful. The new policy has four main points starting with eliminating apps with almost identical names and icons, those whose titles don’t match up with their content, and those that aren’t very useful or unique. Microsoft will also prune away applications considerably more expensive than similar ones in its category.
The company now requires informational apps to be clearly labeled as a “guide” or as a “tutorial,” as well, else they risk being purged. Finally, an app’s title, description, tags and keywords should all be relevant to what it does, otherwise Microsoft might delete it. These rules sound like they could demolish most clone and junk apps from Windows Store if properly enforced — let’s hope Microsoft makes sure that they do.
Filed under: Mobile, Microsoft
Source: Windows









