Google Fit unveiled as Apple HealthKit rival


Google has announced its own rival to Apple’s HealthKit, with Google Fit landing as a centralised hub for all your fitness apps and accessories.


An API which will allow developers to pool data from different fitness apps and activity-tracking gadgets, Google Fit will bring context and uniformity to Android users’ health tracking.


Today we’re announcing a platform preview of Google Fit, this is an open platform designed to help users,” Ellie Powers, Product Manager of Google Play said speaking during the Google I/O keynote.


“We want to help users keep better track of their fitness goals, so we are providing a single set of APIs to manage fitness data from apps and sensors, on both cross-platform devices and on wearables.”


Offering much the same functionality as the iOS 8-bound HealthKit, Google Fit will let users pool fitness data from multiple apps and accessories to get a broader, more well-rounded view of their overall health.


Detailing the benefits of Google Fit, Powers stated: “Before Google Fit I was trying to track and monitor my bike rides through my bike computer and then my weight training through a specialised app and it was a huge hassle. The information was way too siloed to actually help me.”


She added: “Fit takes away the complexity of handling multiple sources, giving you a unified view of a user’s fitness activity.”


The Fit API will offer users the option to share their fitness data between apps, but only if they give their approval first.


As well as unveiling the new Fit features, Powers confirmed that Google has already signed up a number of leading manufacturers to back the service, including adidas, Nike, Intel, LG, Polar and HTC.


“We are thrilled to announce that Nike is allowing other apps and fitness devices to integrate with NikeFuel through this API,” she said.


“Nike will be publishing NikeFuel to the Fit platform, meaning that your app can use it to give better insights into a user’s fitness.”


Read More: Nike FuelBand SE review



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HTC One M8 promised Android L upgrade within 90 days of release


HTC has promised to upgrade the HTC One M8 and original HTC One M7 to the new Android L within 90 days of its release.


Google announced the new Android L operating system and some of its key features during the Google I/O keynote.


Although the Android L OS won’t arrive until sometime in the autumn, HTC has been quick to promise its flagship phones, including the new HTC One M8, will receive the update within three months of the company receiving the code from Google.


“HTC is excited about the new features in the Android L release and we can’t wait to share them with our customers,” said HTC in a statement. “We are committed to updating our flagship HTC One family as fast as possible as part of our HTC Advantage program.”


“We will begin rolling out updates to the HTC One M8 and HTC One M7 worldwide within 90 days of receiving final software from Google, followed shortly thereafter by other One family members and select devices.”


To reiterate, HTC’s 90 day countdown doesn’t start until HTC receives the Google code in the autumn, so you won’t get Android L on your phone until after that point.


“We don’t know precisely when we’ll get full code from Google, but wanted to make sure you’re aware of our commitment.”


Google’s Android L update brings a host of new features to its army of Android devices, most noticeably the new “material” design theme.


This introduces block colours, cleaner designs and shadowed layers to increase the depth and clarity of its mobile UI.


“We wanted to take a radical new approach to design. We wanted Android to have a fresh, bold design”, said Sundar Pichai, Google senior VP and head of Android.


Google hasn’t yet clarified what that L stands for yet, but most are putting their money on lollipop.


Read more: Android 5.0 L features: What’s new?



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Full LG G Watch specs confirmed


The full list of LG G Watch specs have been confirmed as the Android Wear powered smartwatch is made available for pre-order.


Despite having been officially unveiled back in March, LG has, to date, remained tight-lipped about the device’s full specs sheet and capabilities.


Now, however, following the watch’s Google I/O showing that has all changed, with Google confirming the smartwatch will play host to a 1.65-inch LCD display and a Snapdragon 400 processor.


As one of the first to market with Android Wear, LG wanted to develop a product that functions as an essential companion device but most importantly, was simple to use,” Dr. Jong-seok Park, President and CEO of the LG Electronics Mobile Communications Company said in finalising the watch’s specs sheet.


“We wanted a device that would be simple to learn and so intuitive that users wouldn’t even have to think about how to use its features. That’s what the LG G Watch is all about.”


With the 1.65-inch display measuring up just 0.02-inches larger than that of the rival Samsung Gear 2, the device features a 280 x 280 pixel resolution.


Further confirmed LG G Watch specs include 512MB of RAM, 4GB of internal storage and a 400mAh battery.


Lining up at just 9.95 mm thick and a mere 63g in weight, the square faced watch features a 9-axis sensor package – including a gyroscope, accelerometer and compass – and an IP67 certified water and dust resistant coating.


Set to be available in White Gold and Black Titan colour schemes, the LG G Watch is to be made available for pre-order later today, although a finalised UK release date and price has yet to be confirmed.



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Google mocks Apple and iOS 8 during I/O keynote

Apple vs Android

The Apple vs Android fight continues as new targeted comments are thrown




Google has used its Google I/O keynote – the company’s biggest annual event – to mock bitter rival Apple and its upcoming iOS 8 operating system.


As well as unveiled Android L and detailing the full array of Android Wear features users can expect from their upcoming smartwatches, Google, tormenting the Cupertino-based company, suggested that Apple’s mobile OS is years behind the curve and is plagiarising features which have been in Android for years.


When you take a step back and look at what we are doing with Android, the approach we are taking is very unique and distinctive,” Sundar Puchai, Senior Vice President for Android and Apps said.


“We aren’t building a vertically integrated product, what we are doing is building an open platform, at scale.


“We work with hundreds of partners globally to bring products to a platform that touches billions of people and we want to do it in a way that we are innovating at a very, very fast pace.”


Mocking iOS 8, which will bring widgets and customisable keyboards to Apple’s iPhone and iPad devices for the first time later this year, Puchai added: “If you take a look at the innovation that is happening in Android, and if you look at some of the recent announcements from others, you can see that things like custom keyboards, widgets – those things happened in Android four to five years ago.”


Google and Android have a long history of making thinly veiled, barbed comments towards one another during their key presentations and product launches.


With the ball now in Apple’s court, the school ground bickering attention turns to this September’s expected iPhone 6 unveiling.


Read More: iPad Air 2 release date



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Android 5.0 L Features List: What's new?


What is new in Android?


Android 5.0 L is here. Google showed the new software off at Google I/O 2014, letting us Android fans know exactly what new features we have to look forward to.

Here's a spoiler: there are absolutely loads of them. This is the biggest Android update we've seen in a long, long time. So grab a cuppa and strap in because we're going to look at exactly what you'll get in Android 5.0 L.


New look, dubbed Material


The first thing you'll notice about Android 5.0 L is that it looks quite different to the current Android 4.4 Android, and it's not – as we once thought – like the experimental Experience UI used in the Nexus 5.

Google has come up with a new interface look, called Material. It's a lot more vibrant that current Android, and it makes much more use of interface layers. This is quite the opposite of recent trends in UI design, which have all been about making interfaces as flat and simple as possible. Material may be simple, but it's not flat.


Real-time Shadows


The depth is not just about the way the interface is laid out, either. Android 5.0 L introduces real-time generated shadows for interface elements.

This should really help to spruce-up the look of Android, giving it some of the visual tactility of iOS 7. We have seen attempts at this kind of more substantive look in some third-party custom interfaces before, but they generally don't get it right.


Others end up looking busy, and there are often performance hits to any visual flashiness. But we don't expect any of that with Android 5.0 L.


Redesigned nav soft keys


The look of the nav buttons that are a key part of Android have been changed as well. Their functions seem to be the same as ever – back, home and recent apps – but the look seems to have been pilfered from a PlayStation controller.

A triangle, circle and square do manage, strangely enough, to encompass what each of the soft keys are for well enough, though. And the extra simplicity of this is no doubt all a part of the Material look.


More coherence across tablets, phones and PCs


Google is keen to big-up that the Material look is going to be fairly consistent between phones, tablets, desktops and laptops. It wants to offer that smooth cross-platform feel that you get when you really buy into the Apple universe, with an iPhone, iPad and MacBook.

Of course, on the PC front Google is only really going to have access to the Chrome interface – it can't reskin Microsoft's Windows. But the look on a laptop isn't a million miles removed from the tiles of Windows 8.


Redesigned Gmail


It's not just the Android interface that has been given a refresh. The Google apps have too. Much more colour has been injected into Gmail, and the look of the app is both a lot cleaner and more modern.

The square avatar pics of current Gmail have also been traded-in for circular ones.


Dynamic 'heads up' notifications


Another element of Android 5.0 L that we've seen in some third-party Android interfaces is head-up notifications. These pop-up on top of whatever you're doing, meaning you don't have to go to an app or drag down the notifications bar to find out what's going on when your phone beeps.

It seems highly likely that you'll have control over what apps can send you these pop-up notifications. As otherwise they'll become very, very annoying.


New lock screen notifications


Notifications also have a real spot on the lock screen. And, again, this is something that has been common for some time in many custom Android interfaces.

Each notification shows up as a little bar across the screen in high-contrast fashion, making them super-clear. It looks as though four different notifications has be displayed on the lock screen at once on a normal-size phone.


3D multitasking


A minor visual tweak of Android 5.0 L is the new multitasking menu. It still shows your 'recent' apps, but rather than being displayed as a 2D scroll of apps, it's now a 3D cascade of app tiles.

It looks quite similar to the tabs screen of the Chrome browser for Android – no surprise there. The look of the Android take is better, though – sharper, simpler and with good use of those new realtime shadows.


Direct links to apps from Google searches


Developers will now be able to have links to their apps take the place of websites in web searches. What this means is that you'll be able to head directly to a specific part of an app right from the Chrome browser on your phone.

This feature has been accessible to a handful of apps to date, but now it'll be available to all developers. If you're worried about being launched from Chrome into some dodgy app, don't be. Just as lesser sites don't tend to feature too highly in your search results, ropey apps won't either.


64-bit CPU support


One new feature we knew was coming – support for 64-bit CPUs. As 64-bit CPUs clearly designed to work with Android devices have already been officially announced, this one was obvious.

As well as letting many more instructions take place simultaneously, having a 64-bit CPU really lifts the lid on how much RAM Android phones/tablets can actually make use of. With a 32-bit processor the limited address space means that only so much RAM memory can be accessed at once.


Improved GPU support


Google has improved the coding of Android's execution of graphics, allowing for much more advanced visuals. It has been dubbed an 'extension pack', and will finally make top-end processors start to make a bit more sense.

The extension pack enables tesselation, geometry shaders, computer shaders and ASTC texture compression. The latter is an advanced image compression algorithm that will allow for highly effective reduction in the size of art assets.


ART runtime is in


Android 5.0 L switches over to the ART runtime. If you've read our Android 4.4 tips and tricks article you'll know that this is something people with recent Android phones have been able to try out for themselves for a while.

At present Androids use the Dalvik runtime as standard. ART is significantly quicker, but uses a bit more storage space for apps. It's a fair trade off in our opinion.


Smartwatch as authentication


One of the funkiest little additions in Android 5.0 L is a new way to bring your phone out of standby securely. Android Wear watches will work as an authentication tool, meaning you won't need a password to unlock your phone if you're wearing your watch. We're not quite sure yet exact what tech is used to do this. But it is neat.

BUT, of course, if you get mugged your attacker is probably going to nick your Android smartwatch as well as your shiny new Galaxy S6 mobile phone. But it should at least stop your friends from being able to tweet on your behalf should you nip of to the lav for a minute.


Support for USB audio


One of the new APIs of Android 5.0 L is USB audio. This means you'll be able to transmit digital audio right from a phone's microUSB port, bypassing the DAC stage used when you listen through a headphone jack.

What will this mean? It opens up an Android phone to being a genuine audiophile source when paired with a decent outboard USB DAC, and could mean we start to see USB headphones – something Apple is rumoured to be working on through Beats. The Nexus 5 supported USB audio output, but it is not native to all Android 4.4 devices.


Battery efficiency optmisation


Android 5.0 L gets some new battery features, including a reworked Battery Saver mode. Android 4.4 falls well behind the competition in this respect – where phones like the Galaxy S5 have extreme power-saving modes on tap, the basic Android 4.4 battery saver is rather rudimentary.

The lock screen will also tell you how long your phone will take to charge when plugged in – a clever little tweak that seems so obvious now it's in place.


Bluetooth 4.1 support


Android 5.0 L offers native support for Bluetooth 4.1. Top-end phones have Bluetooth 4.0 these days, but what's the difference?

Bluetooth 4.1 doesn't clash with 4G signal like Bluetooth 4.0, and it gives manufacturers much more control over the timeout times of the connection. This gives much more scope for controlling power consumption. Bluetooth 4.1 also improves connectivity, letting Bluetooth peripherals talk to each other more easily.


Android Auto


A major new bit of Android 5.0 L is Android Auto. This is a bit like Apple's CarPlay – it's an in-car system that runs off your Android phone.

You jump into your car and your Android 5.0 L mobile will start transmitting Android Auto to the screen on your car's dashboard. Its interface looks quite a lot like Google Now and Android Wear, and will of course let you GPS navigate to wherever you want to go. We imagine it'll be a lot more open than CarPlay too.


Android TV


While not a core part of the Android system, Android TV is a huge development in the Android universe. It's a version of the platform designed for your TV, and it'll eventually be built into set top boxes and TVs.

You'll control the thing with your Android phone, and will be able to play Android games, watch video and do pretty much anything you can with your Android phone.



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Native Microsoft Office editing integrated into Google Drive


Google has announced you'll now be able to edit Microsoft Word, PowerPoint and Excel files within its Google Drive suite of apps.


Previously, you'd need to convert the Office files into Google Docs or other files in order to view them in Google Drive, but now they appear just as you'd expect them to.


Google has worked to integrate Quick Office into Google Docs to offer native Office editing with the Google Drive suite of editing apps.


Even in emails, when you're sent a Word document for example, you can open it directly into Google Drive and make edits.


When you're done, you can then save it back as a Word document (or PowerPoint or Excel) to send back to your contact for them to use.


Of course, you can still convert that file into a Google Drive document to get full access to the collaboration features.


Another Word feature that has been added to Google Drive is Suggestion Edits. Working in a similar way to Track Changes in Review Mode of Word, Suggestion Edits lets you add your own changes or ideas to the document to be viewed by the file owner and its collaborators.


They can then be added or rejected according to the feelings of the group.


Working with these new features is Google Slides, the Google Drive version of Microsoft PowerPoint, which lets you create presentations to share and edit with your friends.


With Google Drive boasting 190 million 30-day active users, there's no wonder Google has worked to make the editing tools even more productive.


Read more: Best Chromecast apps 2014



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Full Android Wear features detailed at Google I/O


As expected, Google has used its Google I/O keynote to detail the full array of upcoming Android Wear features, and its wearables OS looks like and exciting proposition.


Set to power devices such as the LG G Watch and Motorola Moto 360, Android Wear is a smartwatch based operating system built around many of the same Android features found in the company’s dominant smartphone OS.


“We are right at the beginning of the miniaturisation of technology, which means that it’s finally possible to make a powerful computer small enough to wear comfortably on your body all day long,” David Singleton, Google’s Director of Engineering for Android said in unveiling Android Wear.


He added: “There is a great opportunity to build rich experiences to these devices, that’s why we are building Android Wear.”



Android Wear Design


The Android Wear design will be one familiar to many smartphone users, closely echoing the look and feel of the standard Android OS.


Utilising a traditional swipe to navigate UI, Android Wear has been developed to support both square and round faced watches, with the wearable OS featuring textured backgrounds, and a sleek interface.


“People will be wearing these small, portable devices so style is important and that why Android wear supports both square and circular screens and we think there will be a broad range of stylish devices,” Singleton said.


As you would on a handset, Android Wear watches will allow users to slide through notification and alert ‘cards’, as well as those of apps open on your phone. Those wanting a less cluttered smartwatch experience can simply swipe a card away to remove it from their stream.



Android Wear Features


Looking to remove the need to pull your smartphone out of your pocket, Android Wear will bring all manner of notifications and alerts to your compatible smartwatch.


“Android wear is about relevant information,” Singleton said detailing the software. “It can understand context about what you care about and at any given time will show you the most important information to you.”


This information includes everything from call, email and messaging alerts to app notifications, location and weather details and activity data.


With Android Wear keeping your watch and your phone in sync, anytime your phone receives a notification or alert which causes it to buzz, the details will automatically be pushed to your watch which will then vibrate.


It won’t be hard to fill your Android Wear watch with compatible apps either.


“When a watch is connected, the wearable portion of an app is installed and kept up to date on that device,” Singleton revealed.


This effortless integration is a major step ahead of Samsung’s Tizen-based Gear smartphones and subsequent device manager. With apps from cooking adds – which can set oven timer alerts at the touch of the screen – to music controls, the Android Wear OS looks set to finally bring smartwatches to the realms of viability.


“Your smartwatch will act as a key in the multiscreen world,” Singleton said of this wrist-based control features.


As you would expect, the Android Wear features list includes means of handling incoming calls. Although it doesn’t appear that Android Wear will support wrist-based calls, the software will allow users to reject calls or send one of a number of SMS responses from their wrist.


With the rise of wearbales birthing the introduction of a mass of fitness trackers, Android Wear will also support a number of activity tracing features.


As well as showing daily step counts and weekly activity charts, Singleton revealed that “on devices that support it, [Android Wear] can even check your heart rate after a jog.”


The first Android Wear compatible devices – the LG G Watch, Samsung Gear Live and Motorola Moto 360 – will all launch in the coming weeks and months.


The LG G Watch and Samsung Gear Live will be made available for pre-order later today.


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