|
Google has started rolling out a staged YouTube for Android update, and it's probably the biggest redesign the app has seen yet. We've gotten a hold of the APK with exact version 5.0.21 (the previous version is 4.5.17), and after playing with it for about 30 minutes so far, I can definitively say that it's hugely improved. - A brand new card-based UI - the app looks better than ever before. It's like Matias Duarte has reached down from the sky and graced it with his magic touch.
- Previously rumored in-app multitasking that's nothing like we've ever seen before. It really has to be experienced in person, but basically you can make any video you're watching turn into a small window on the bottom right by swiping it down, pressing the down arrow in the top left corner, or simply pressing the Back button.
- You can then navigate the app while the video is playing.
- You bring it back up by dragging or tapping the small window and dismiss it by swiping it sideways.
- The really slick part here is that as you start sliding sideways, the sound volume starts to fade. This is some top-notch UX here.
- Interestingly, the swipe-down gesture works only in portrait mode on phones. On tablets, it's available in both orientations.
Way too many changes to list. So here. Source
|
United States22883 Posts
I hope they didn't fuck it up as badly as they did Maps.
The new combined Maps/Local/Navigation is basically inferior in every respect to the old separate apps.
The Local stuff doesn't give you information like distance or direction, so you basically have to click through each option to find out of it's actually in the direction you're headed, plus the list just seems less consistent.
The new Nav is missing the traffic information and it's really just not a good interface, plus you have to go through an extra menu to get started.
And Maps just seems to be much slower than the old version.
Luckily you can do patch rollbacks in Android and get the original 4.2.2 Maps/Local/Nav, but that won't be the case with 4.3. I have no idea how Google managed to fuck up Maps so badly. They completely misinterpreted customer needs.
|
Had to reset/reboot my Nexus 7 to factory conditions because it hasn't been able to get past the X since last night
|
Hey guys, is the Galaxy Express any good? I'm looking for a phone with good battery life, has good online functionality and let's me use google translate/skype and maps.
that's really all I'm using it for. dont care for quality of display 720p or whatever).
|
I'll get back to France in a few days and i wanted to get the new Nexus 7 right away but i see some bad reviews with bugs here, are those isolated or is this a recurrent problem? :o
|
Google’s Chromecast is an inexpensive device designed to let you stream internet video to your TV. But as folks quickly figured out, you could use the device for much more by creating software that lets you stream local video to your TV. For instance, Koushik Dutta has been working on an app called AllCast that lets you stream videos from your phone’s Gallery (or from Dropbox or Google Drive) to a Chromecast, and Leon Nicholls created a tool called Fling that lets you send local videos from your PC to a Chromecast.
Neither of those apps work anymore.
Google just rolled out an update for the Chromecast’s software, and it seems to disable support for streaming content directly from a PC or mobile device to the $35 media streaming box.
Source
|
Nexus 4 price has been dropped by $100. UK store as well.
|
|
On August 26 2013 14:49 {CC}StealthBlue wrote:Show nested quote +Google’s Chromecast is an inexpensive device designed to let you stream internet video to your TV. But as folks quickly figured out, you could use the device for much more by creating software that lets you stream local video to your TV. For instance, Koushik Dutta has been working on an app called AllCast that lets you stream videos from your phone’s Gallery (or from Dropbox or Google Drive) to a Chromecast, and Leon Nicholls created a tool called Fling that lets you send local videos from your PC to a Chromecast.
Neither of those apps work anymore.
Google just rolled out an update for the Chromecast’s software, and it seems to disable support for streaming content directly from a PC or mobile device to the $35 media streaming box. Source Well that sucks.
Though now that I've been tooling around with Serviio, I find it difficult to want a Chromecast anymore. With the Youtube and Twitch plugins for Serviio, AND with the ability to just stream videos files from the PC to the TV, what can a Chromecast do that I can't already do with Serviio?
Besides do some things easier, I suppose. Serviio is a bit annoying to tool around with.
|
|
Time to buy a bunch of kitkats.
|
I wonder how much it cost google to license "Kit-Kat" the brand.
|
On September 04 2013 06:38 Sn0_Man wrote: I wonder how much it cost google to license "Kit-Kat" the brand. It was free, google suggested it and they were ok with it, it's just free advertising for kit-kats.
|
|
i hope not. thats a fucking huge phone
|
oh damn.... that's really too bad... those are huge phones indeed.
|
I hope they refresh the Nexus 4 and have a new Nexus 5.
|
Please Oh Mighty Lord, Jesus, Yahweh, Allah, the Great Destroyer Shiva, let the battery be 3500 mAh or greater.
For the love of all that's good and holy.
|
My Nexus 4 gets SUPER UBER hot and it is quite annoying. Even when just browsing the web or reading a book it gets hot, and don't talk about playing music you put on the device itself... Is anyone else having this problem or just me? Is there a way for it not to get so damn hot so fast?
|
So a possibly overdue long opinion on the Nexus 7 (2013) because I don't feel like doing calculus right now:
First Impressions: + Show Spoiler +Professional, understated, and awesome come to mind. The new nexus 7 is a bit different from the old one in terms of just looks to start with. It's replaced the rubbery texture of the old nexus 7 with a matte black that feels (in my opinion) a little more premium, and in my opinion, better than the old version, along with most plastics you find on other devices. If you tend to have sweaty or greasy fingers, matte is a great option as you will still slide more smoothly and it won't look as dirty as if you had the kind of plastic on the galaxy range or even aluminum devices.
It's a bit thinner than the old version, and noticeably lighter as well. Build quality is top notch, up there with every other high quality device you can think of.
Hardware: + Show Spoiler +You can look at more in depth reviews easily for more information, but some basic thoughts on the hardware from a subjective POV. First, the display is *amazing.* It's noticeably better than my girlfriend's iPad2, and another friend's iPad mini, as well as my friend's old Nexus 7. You absolutely will not find a nicer one for less than $400 right now, and I believe Anandtech matched the display to the iPad 4, or just behind it, even though it costs half as much.
The speakers are stereo back facing. I believe the original had mono back facing speakers. The stereo sounds pretty good when the sound is angled towards you. If they aren't, it's not as good. It's not usually that hard when you're watching videos because you can angle the sound with your hands.
Buttons aren't as crisp as something like the iPhone or probably iPad, but they aren't mushy, and I like them. The camera is nothing special, but pretty good for a 5MP tablet model with no flash. Same with the FFC - it does what it needs to.
Android and Specs: + Show Spoiler +Android 4.3 is pretty nice. With a Snapdragon 600 chip (albeit underclocked a bit, although this doesn't actually give it much worse performance since it has the thermal room to run at 1.5ghz on all four cores) and 2GB of RAM, it can fly around Android pretty nicely. I don't really notice any lag whenever I'm switching apps, and I'm a much bigger fan of Android itself than I was a year or two ago (although this is purely subjective). While probably not new (I haven't been on android for a while, I use a windows phone), the way the notifications bar and settings bar are set up is nice, and lets me reach pretty much everything I need instantly.
Battery life is pretty much amazing as well. Web Browsing gives you *long* battery life. Anandtech can give you more specific usage numbers rivaling or beating various iPads, but in my experience, my general use case includes lots of chrome, maybe reading a book for a bit, and playing some games (lots of N64 emulator, some other stuff), and I can make 2 or 3 days on it. Idle power usage is fantastic... it will use hardly any power over night. The auto brightness setting is pretty accurate, if a tad too bright, but even with auto on battery life is still fantastic. There is no power saver battery mode, but I suspect that something like that will be available if you root the device.
Conclusion: + Show Spoiler +Definitely worth it. Go buy it now
If anybody has any other questions I'll try and remember to respond, if somebody hasn't already answered them all
|
|
|
|