The main keynote at Google I/O has come and gone. In the 2-hours of talking and demonstrations, we saw a bunch of cool new stuff. Everything from Android to Google Photos got attention. You can read all the news on our Google I/O 2017 page, but if you want just the highlights, here are the 10 biggest announcements.
Google Lens
Google Lens is a new feature to go along with Assistant and Google Photos. Think of it like eyes for Google Assistant. You can already ask Assistant questions, but with Lens it will be able to actually see what you’re talking about. You can scan businesses to see ratings and reviews, scan objects for more info, and a bunch more cool stuff. It will be rolling out soon.
Google Photos Suggested Sharing
Suggested Sharing will make it easier for you to share photos with relevant people after a big event or outing. It uses machine learning to identify people in your photos and automatically groups them together so you can easily share them with the person. Google hopes that this will solve the problem of never getting photos taken on other people’s phones.
Google Photos Shared Libraries
Another new Photos feature is Shared Libraries, which makes it easy to share specific groups or sets of pictures with people. For instance, you could set it up so all photos of your kids are automatically shared with your wife or husband. It takes all the work of sharing photos out of your hands. Pretty handy.
Google Home Hands-Free Calling
With hands-free calling, you’ll be able to call anyone by simply asking Google Home. Simply say “Ok Google, call my mom” and Assistant will use your phone to call your mom and play it over the Home speaker. You can talk to Home like a speaker phone. This is great for being able to talk to people while you’re doing other things.
Google Home Visual Responses
Right now, Google Home gives responses in one way: voice. You ask something with your voice and an audible response is recited out of the speaker. “Visual Responses” will change that if you have a connected device. You’ll be able to say “Show me my calendar on the TV” or have directions sent right to your smartphone. This adds a screen to Google Home without actually adding a screen to the device.
Google Home Bluetooth Streaming
Google Home is a speaker, but it doesn’t act like a typical Bluetooth speaker. To play music on Home, you have to cast it to the device. Soon, Google Home will act like a regular Bluetooth speaker. You will be able to connect to it and play music from any app on your phone. No more looking for the cast button or hoping the app supports it.
Keyboard for Google Assistant
One of the limitations of Google Assistant on phones is you can only interact with your voice. Whether you’re in a public place or just don’t feel like speaking, you’ll be able to pull up information up on just about anything by using your phone’s keyboard. This should make it easier to interact with Assistant in certain situations.
Standalone Daydream VR headsets
Google finally announced a standalone VR platform for people who want VR without having to use their phones. It’s going to be part of the overall Daydream family, with devices having their own displays, processing internals, and power sources. Google isn’t introducing a headset to kick things off. They saved that for other OEMs.
The first devices will be made available from HTC and Lenovo. Furthermore, Qualcomm will offer a reference design platform for other OEMs who want to quickly prototype their own standalone headsets. These headsets will feature WorldSense, a space-sensing technology that makes it easy for VR applications to read your surroundings and more accurately track where you are.
Smart Reply for Gmail
Google has announced that Smart Reply will finally be making its way to the Gmail app for Android. Smart Reply is not a new feature by any stretch of the imagination, as it has been available through Inbox by Gmail for some time. It predects how you might respond to an email and gives you the option to enter those responses with a single tap. No more typing out redundant replies.
Android O Beta Program
Google announced that the Android O Beta Program is available now for Pixel and Nexus owners. The Android O developer preview has been available for about 2 months now, but the Beta Program is more for regular consumers. If you have one of the supported devices ( Nexus 5X, Nexus 6P, Nexus Player, Pixel C, Pixel, Pixel XL), all you have to do is visit this link and click “enroll device.”
It’s already been available for a few months as a developer preview, but now the rest of us can finally get our hands on an upcoming version of Android. Android O Beta starts shipping today, if you point your browser over to android.com/beta.
The company used the opportunity to show a number of features that have already been available in the developer preview. Notifications have gotten number of key updates, including the addition of Notification Dots – a little circle that sits in the corner of an app icon, letting users know that specific app has a new note tied to it. Giving it a long press, will pop up a preview window, similar to iOS, so users never have to leave the desktop to view.
Autofill is pretty much exactly what you think it is, with the company guess at what you’re trying to say while your typing, using context like user names, much as it does in the desktop-based browser. Smart Text Selection, meanwhile, spots things like business names and addresses from around the web, highlight the whole segment, to help avoid awkwardly highlighting and unhighlighting text, piece by piece.
Picture in Picture was already announced, but not available in the dev preview. The feature essentially place a small video box on the desktop, while other apps are open. That way you can, say, watch a YouTube or Netflix video or do a Duo chat, while sending an email. Assuming, of course, your screen is big enough and you’ve got enough processing power.
The new version of the operating system is also set to bring some advantages on the hardware front, according to the company, including, notably, an increase in boot times, which should fire up the handset in around half the time.
Also new is Vitals, a new feature available for Play that helps developers spot issues with apps that can potentially impact phone security, battery life and the like. The biggest cheer of the day from the developer-heavy crowd, on the other hand, came when the company announced Android support for the Kotlin programming language (nerds).
O adds some nice touches to the Android experience, though nothing quite revolution, making it a fairly minor upgrade in the grand scheme of things. Though the company is clearly doing a lot to help future proof the operating system by building out the backend with a number of new developer tools.
Also worth noting is the fact that Android on a whole just crossed the two billion monthly active device threshold, in case you had any doubt as far as the ubiquity of the company’s mobile operating system. Of course, fragmentation is still a very real issue with the OS at present.
After all, Nougat, which officially launched in August of last year, is only currently deployedon around seven-percent of devices, well below the 31 and 32-percent that Marshmallow and Lollipop currently command.
As far as what this version will actually be called (coughOreo*cough), we’re still waiting on the official unveil.
Sources: phandroid
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