In between protestors’ outbursts, Google’s top brass unleashed a boatload of news at the company’s annual developer conference, Google I/O 2014.
Here’s everything the company announced.
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The next version of Android is here … well, almost.
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Today at its I/O developers conference, Google announced a developer preview version of Android L, its next big Android update. And no, we still don’t know what that “L” stands for (although current rumors seem to point to “Lollipop,” keeping with Google’s obsession with sweets).
Why show off Android L so early? It seems Google couldn’t wait to let developers check out its new “material design” in Android L, which puts a heavy emphasis on clean colors, icons, and typography.
Read the full story: Google launches a developer preview for Android L, sporting a colorful new design
Google shows off Android Wear, the OS for smartwatches
Google rolled out its Android Wear operating system today at Google I/O, and demonstrated some of the key features, which are still being developed.
The company announced Wear in March, but today it showed off a few watches based on the wearable OS — and showed some ways that companies can use it by developing apps that work with wearables.
Google announced a new Samsung phone, the Gear Live, that runs Wear. The LG G-Watch, which also runs Wear, will be available in the Play store today. Another watch, the round Moto watch from Motorola, will be available later this summer.
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Read the full story: Google shows off Android Wear, the OS for smartwatches
Android Auto will make your car into an extension of your phone
Google announced Android Auto, an Android platform for the car, at its annual developer conference today.
“Android Auto is contextually aware to give you the right information when you need it,” said Brady.
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Android Auto is “completely voice-enabled so you can keep you hands on the wheel and your eyes on the road,” Brady added.
Much as with other car-phone integration systems already on the market, a driver can connect their phone to the car and put the it down and then use the car’s dials and buttons to control the apps running on his phone.
Read the full story: Android Auto will make your car into an extension of your phone
Google reveals its next generation ‘Material’ design language — and it looks a lot like Windows and iOS
Google revealed the guidelines for its new “Material” design language, a system that will influence the design of every Android app going forward.
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This is an unsurprising release for Google, which continues to emphasize its commitment to design in the face of perfectionist competitors like Apple.
The new design language, which will be used throughout the next version of Google’s mobile OS, Android L, has strong echoes of the designs recently adopted by Apple — and especially Microsoft.
Read the full story: Google reveals its next generation ‘Material’ design language — and it looks a lot like Windows and iOS
Google announces Google Fit health data platform
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As expected, Google officially announced its Google Fit health-data platform. This is Google’s answer to Apple’s HealthKit and Samsung’s SAMI health platforms.
In the next few weeks, Google will release a set of Google Fit APIs to app developers, which will enable them to create apps that can manage and combine multiple types of health data.
The data — like heart rate, steps taken, and blood sugar level — can come from various wearable devices, including those that use sensors to detect biometrics data. The Google Fit API will enable app makers to present “a complete picture of the user’s fitness,” as Google says it.
Read the full story: Google announces Google Fit health data platform
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Google debuts Android TV, the next generation of Google TV development
Google debuted Android TV, its entertainment-focused version of the Android operating system.
It promised that this is not a new platform for entertainment but rather a more cohesive update that ties together features and devices that make consuming content easier.
“We’re simply giving TVs the same level of attention phones and tablets have had,” said Android director of engineering David Singleton.
Read the full story: Google debuts Android TV, the next generation of Google TV development
Google is bringing mobile games to television with Android TV
Google will work with a variety of vendors to integrate Android TV’s game capabilities sets from companies like Sony as well as boxes from Asus, Razer, and others. Android TV will enable people to run apps on their TVs, and that of course includes mobile games — joining a host of others (none of which have gained a significant foothold) that play Android games in the living room.
Read the full story: Google is bringing mobile games to television with Android TV
Google launches new courses in programming with online education provider Udacity
Google is starting to take education into its own hands with the launch of four new courses to teach the next generation of mobile programmers how to use its Android operating system.
The company announced plans to expand its vocational training partnership with online education provider Udacity.
Read the full story: Google launches new courses in programming with online education provider Udacity
Android now has over 1B active users, up from 538M last year
Android now has over 1 billion users, Google revealed today at the company’s I/O developer conference, up from 538 million last year.
This is not just a count of devices sold: These are people who have actively used an Android device within the last 30 days. The number of monthly active Android users has doubled every year, Google said.
Read the full story: Android now has over 1B active users, up from 538M last year
Android now makes up 62% of tablet shipments worldwide
Google’s Sundar Pichai told the crowd at this year’s Google I/O conference that this number is up from 39 percent of tablet shipments two years ago, and up from 46 percent last year.
Read the full story: Android now makes up 62% of tablet shipments worldwide
AndroidOne is Google’s new mobile platform for India and beyond
Google senior vice president Sundar Pichai announced a set of hardware reference platforms called AndroidOne. It’s meant to help phone manufacturers create less-expensive Android phones for sale in markets where $400 to $600 for a handset is out of reach for most people.
The resulting devices could feature a 4.5-inch screen, an FM radio, dual SIM, and an SD card — and they’ll hit the market for under $100, Pichai said.
Read the full story: AndroidOne is Google’s new mobile platform for India and beyond
Google’s Chromecast streamer learns some cool, new tricks
Chromecast streaming device has added some new features that are sure to please is many viewers.
The most important new feature is the capability to mirror any images or video from your phone to your TV set. This can be done with one touch in Android.
There’s also a new “guest casting” feature. If a friend come over and wants to stream a YouTube video from his or her phone, they can now do so without logging onto the house Wi-Fi network, as was previously required.
Read the full story: Google’s Chromecast streamer learns some cool, new tricks
Google says Chromebooks will run Android apps in the future
Google wants to make its Chromebooks as pleasant as possible, and the more popular Android smartphones seem like a good place to draw from.
Google senior vice president Sundar Pichai demonstrated how Vine, Flipboard, Evernote, and other native Android apps can be used right on a Chromebook after people use it on another device, like an Android tablet.
And why not go further? Google’s well rated Chromebooks can now display notifications from people’s Android phones.
Read the full story: Google says Chromebooks will run Android apps in the future
Google Drive now has 190M users & a new tablet app for presentations
Google announced news things in Google Drive: Google Slides, native Microsoft Office editing, and Drive for Work.
With Google Slides, people can now create presentations right from their Android tablets. Google Drive had presentations already, but this is a new way to create slide decks with tablet-friendliness.
Google also announced native Microsoft Office editing, meaning that Office files can be opened, edited, and saved from within the Drive apps, all without changing the file type. While the company announced that it has more than 190 million users, this seems to be a quiet admission that it’s still no match for Microsoft Office and that Office is not going away. Google is now agreeing to play with it nicely.
Read the full story: Google Drive now has 190M users & a brand new tablet app for presentations
Google wraps up Stackdriver integration work and releases monitoring tools for its cloud
Less than two months after Google bought its way into the public-cloud monitoring business with its Stackdriver acquisition, the tech giant revealed a helpful new product today based partly on the startup’s technology.
The new Google Cloud Monitoring service combines Stackdriver’s stuff with technology “we already had at Google,” Brian Goldfarb, Google Cloud Platform’s head of marketing, told VentureBeat yesterday in an interview.
Read the full story on VentureBeat: Google wraps up Stackdriver integration work and releases monitoring tools for its cloud
Google unveils a big-data pipeline for batch and stream processing in its cloud
The tech giant announced a service that can do much, much more than MapReduce: Google Cloud Dataflow. It can either run a series of computing jobs, batch-style, or do constant work as data flows in. Engineers can start using the service in Google’s burgeoning public cloud. Google takes care of managing the thing.
“We handle all the infrastructure and the back-end work required to scale up and scale down, depending on the kind of data needs that you have,” Brian Goldfarb, the head of marketing for the Google Cloud Platform, told VentureBeat ahead of Google I/O.
Read the full story: Google unveils a big-data pipeline for batch and stream processing in its cloud
Google acquires the team behind Appurify, a Google Ventures-funded app testing service
Google today announced that it has acquired Appurify, an app testing service for developers which raised $4.5 million from Google Ventures last year.
Google clarified that it plans to “help [the team] further scale” the developer service. Google also shared that Appurify will continue to support both iOS and Android apps as a “freemium service.”
Read the full story: Google acquires the team behind Appurify, a Google Ventures-funded app testing service
Google rolls out more public cloud tools for devs, including a debugger
Google made its fledgling Google Cloud Platform for making and running apps more developer-friendly today by launching a series of tools that speed up discovery of problems and improve monitoring.
Greg DeMichillie, the director of product management on the Google Cloud Platform, demonstrated Cloud Save, Cloud Debugger, and Cloud Trace.
Read the full story: Google rolls out more public cloud tools for devs, including a debugger
Google Play Games nabs 100M users over last 6 months — and gets new features like Quests
Only a year old, Google Play Games is growing at rapid rate.
The company revealed that developers and Android owners are all hopping aboard Google Play Games. The company introduced this connected platform at last year’s I/O, and since then it has popped up in hundreds of games that use it for achievements, leaderboards, and online multiplayer. Now, the company is preparing to launch some new features — like Quests — as the platform continues to expand.
“Google Play Games is now the fastest growing mobile game network of all time,” Google Play product manager Ellie Powers said. “We’ve activated over 100 million new users over the past six months.”
Read the full story: Google Play Games nabs 100M users over last 6 months — and gets new features like Quests
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