Google’s new Photos app is coming soon, as a separate experience from Google+. Screenshots of the Android version leaked today, courtesy of Android Police, and there is a lot to show.
We’ve heard rumors since at least August 2014 that Google+’s image functions may be spun out into a standalone photo service. In March, Sundar Pichai, senior vice president for products at Google, said the company is going to put a renewed focus on photos. “Photos are a big use case,” Pichai said. “So we are going to say this is the stream now.”
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Just like in Google+, the app lets users search for photos (including by referencing specific people, animals, and objects), back up your photos automatically, and manage your photos. Users can view their photos by day or month, as well as in a “comfortable view” which shows photos by day in a staggered grid.
The app also supports the ability to pinch your way into photos, swipe out of them, and even drag to select multiple photos:
Auto Awesome (released at Google I/O 2013), a feature that applies special effects to photos and creates new viewing experiences with them, is being renamed to “Assistant.” In addition to the existing feature set, it lets users create albums, movies, stories, animations, and collages.
Automatic photo organization as well as face-matching are also present. The editing interface has also been revamped: the cropping interface has a new rotation wheel and now snaps to various aspect ratios.
Last but not least, the new app includes photo and video link sharing with privacy controls. You can choose to have location metadata stripped from photos that are shared via links, as well as see all your links and delete any of them.
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We may see Google Photos at Google’s I/O 2015 in just a few days. Since the event is a developer conference though, if the product does launch there, the company will detail how app makers can leverage the new service.
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