Monday, October 27, 2014

Motorola Moto 360 Photo Gallery


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Motorola finally showed off the Moto 360 at Google I/O few hours back. The Moto 360 was announcedearlier this year and is powered by Android Wear. Motorola already confirmed that it is water resistant, compatible with Android devices running Android 4.3 or later and uses Bluetooth 4.0 LE to connect to them. Motorola is yet to detail the specifications of the Moto 360, but you can see the smartwatch in pictures below that would give an idea about it.
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Even though the Moto 360 looks big, it is not that big for your hand.
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It has solid metal build and has a leather strap. It would also come with steel strap.
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It has a edge-to-edge screen and has a small cut out on the bottom when displaying some content or notifications.
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It can also measure your steps. Since it has a touch screen, you can swipe vertically to switch between notifications, music controls and more. You can swipe horizontally to interact with the screen you are on.
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It has solid metal base and also has a button on the side.
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The Moto 360 would go on sale this summer. Motorola would reveal more details about the smartwatch at the launch. Check out more images of the gorgeous smartwatch below.
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Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Google announces Android TV

Google has entered into the set-top box space by officially announcing Android TV. The TV service will run on set-top box hardware similar to Amazon and Apple TV.
Android TV
Google as developed software that helps smartphones and tablets interact with a television to perform a variety of tasks, including searching for videos, controlling playback, and controlling a video game.  Users will be able to stream content from their smartphones and tablets to their TVs using the system, which will also integrate with Google’s Chromecast device. Android TV will rely on the Material Design UI of Android L, which brings in support for HDMI, IPTV, and other sources.
Android TV has a homescreen that is designed to put content front and center. It recommends content to the user and the top of the homescreen shows recently used apps. One of the key features of Android TV is voice control which enables users to find information like TV Shows, Movies, Music etc with simple voice commands. The interface is based on cards which maker searching easy by simple scrolling. These cards are organized into Movies, Shows, Games and Apps sections.
Google is also putting focus of Android TV as users can use an Android tablet as a controller, while an Android game is broadcast on your TV set. All 2014 Sony and Sharp 4K televisions will support Android TV. Google has teamed up with NVIDIA to create a Tegra-powered Android TV development kit that would be available starting today. NVIDIA also offers Tegra K1 Android TV reference design for OEMs interested in building set top boxes or TVs based on Android TV.
This is not Google’s first attempt to get into your living room. The company had forayed into creating TV software with Google TV in 2010 but unfortunately it did not garner any momentum.

Friday, October 17, 2014

Material Design is the new visual language of everything Google


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At the Google I/O conference in San Francisco, design played a huge role in the company’s announcements to the public. After getting Android One out of the way, Android and Chrome chief Sundar Pichai invited Matias Duarte on stage. Being one of the highly creative minds behind the critically acclaimed WebOS interface, Matias made his mark on Android with Ice Cream Sandwich. Fondly called Android ICS, the update was and still is one of the biggest visual overhauls for Android, as a platform. “Holo” was the design language spear headed by Matias, who talked up design principles based on clean lines and flatter interface elements. It was the beginning of a more coherent interface for Android, but Google, as a company, was heading in a separate design direction.
All Google products received a “Card” interface treatment, starting mainly with Google Now, which revolves around the same concept as its function. This started permeating other Google products too, including the company’s premiere social networking product Google+, its massively popular mail product and even YouTube. Eventually that trickled down to respective clients in different form factors like mobile, where, at a point, Android had to change itself to look more “Google” than it was, right now. And then Android 4.4 KitKat happened, with several minor changes to bring it in line with other Google products. The use of a cards interface was encouraged, with many third party developers taking a liking. Google’s iOS apps went “cards” style, sometimes even before Android, so a change was set in motion. But it still felt fragmented, as KitKat could not really cover each and every aspect of the operating system seeking a visual overhaul, so something had to be done to unite everything at Google. Enter material design.
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The I/O 2014 live keynote had speakers talking in front a massive screen that showed off all their names with a throbbing animation of an expanding circle, in really a cool colour palette. This was material design in action, way before Matias Duarte started detailing it with arguably over reaching statements and a generous use of adjectives. “Material Design” is the name that Google’s design team have given, for the company’s new design language. It will span across all the company’s products, right from Android on the phone to Android on TVs, and from Chrome on the phone to Chrome on your laptops and desktops. Everything that Google does, from here on, will be based on “Material Design”. So, what is material design?
If you want to go by the definition, Material Design is -
We challenged ourselves to create a visual language for our users that synthesizes the classic principles of good design with the innovation and possibility of technology and science. This is material design.
or
A material metaphor is the unifying theory of a rationalized space and a system of motion. Our material is grounded in tactile reality, inspired by our study of paper and ink, yet open to imagination and magic.
Well, we know it’s a bit hard to comprehend, we too were initially dumbfounded by it. So, the first one is all about creating a visual language (a set of rules and properties) that follows the good practices of design (like using whitespace, sticking to grids and so on) and takes advantage of effects realized through technology (like graphical effects of motion, shadow manipulation, light sources etc). The second one is almost the same, except it explains their inspiration behind the language, which is paper and ink, while the mention of tactile reality deals with them following real world properties of motion.
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These are three basic design principles behind “Material Design”. We already saw that “Material is the metaphor”, but “bold, graphic, intentional” reveals more about their ideas behind the use of colour, typography and indicators to guide users to the right interface elements. Motion on the other hand deals with the introduction of real world-like animations, involving a lot of movement. These three pillars of “Material Design” define what developers needs to know, to make their apps coherent with the company’s products.
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As mentioned earlier, Material Design takes Google’s “cards” interface ahead, leaving Holo behind, so that’s a pretty drastic change for the company’s flagship mobile product. Users will be looking at a new colour palette, a new interface with perspective shadows and of course, cards. This is the final nail in the coffin for all the design inconsistencies the Google of day before yesterday had. While it will take considerable time to roll out, Material Design will be playing the central role to Android’s yet-unnamed L update, which is scheduled to arrive for the Nexus 5 and other newer devices, as a developer preview.
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This will help developers with updating their current apps to match the new design language, which already has a robust preview document that details all the changes and thinking behind “Material Design”. It’s a “living document”, Google says, as it promises to keep adding guidelines and good practices. This might also mean that the complete instructions are still a work in progress, which might also explain the delay in the L update this time.
Spanning across Android phones, tablets, Chromebooks and even Google’s web properties, “Material design” will change the Mountain View company forever, as it gears up to offer its customers the coherence they always needed.

Google Search update adds “Ok Google” detection from anywhere in the phone

Along with a bunch of announcements at the I/O developer conference yesterday, Google has bumped an update to  Search for Android. The latest update adds the ability for a user to say “Ok Google” anywhere on the device to initiate voice search.
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To enable this feature, you have to go into Google Search, scroll to the bottom, tap Menu and navigate to Settings, then Voice, then toggle the “Ok Google” Detection setting. The hotword detection feature will be available on homescreens, running apps and even lock  screen. Prior to this update, users had to be on their phone’s homescreen to access the feature. We have previously seen this  feature on Motorola’s Moto X device and Droid line.
In addition, the latest 3.5.14 version of the app also gets Audio History. This feature helps the app learn your voice and  analyze it from your past voice searches for future accurate searches. Google is also adding  privacy controls to the feature. Users can review their own Audio History, delete individual searches, or simply disable the feature altogether.

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Opera Mini for iPhone and iPad updated with new UI, compression mode and more


Opera Mini 8 for iPhone
Opera has updated Opera Mini for iOS devices to version 8.0. This update brings a completely new user interface with a flat design similar to iOS 7, new compression modes, QR code support and more new features. All design elements have been completely re-built from the ground up, to fit in with iOS styling and the familiar user friendliness of Opera’s mobile browsers, says Opera.

New features in Opera Mini 8 for iPhone and iPad

  • New design that has been completely re-built from the ground up to match iOS 7′s flat design
  • Combined search and address bar offers search suggestions or go to a web address right away.
  • QR reader lets you share URLs via QR code
  • Option to edit addresses and search terms using a slider
  • Switch search providers easily so that you can search on Amazon, eBay and Wikipedia
  • Opera Mini mode offers up to 90% data compression that lets you save data
  • Opera Turbo mode saves slightly less data than Opera Mini mode, but offers better website compatibility
Download Opera Mini 8 for iPhone and iPad from the Apple iTunes Store for free.