Showing posts with label android. Show all posts
Showing posts with label android. Show all posts

Saturday, January 31, 2015

Microsoft plans to take on Android(Google) by investing in Cyanogen.

cyanogen-invests-microsoft-google
Image: Digit.in
Microsoft is getting ready for a newer and unexpected battle with Google. This time, Microsoft plans to take on Android by investing in Cyanogen.
Cyanogen is a startup which makes and maintains its own version of Android. Cyanogen is currently being used in the OnePlus One, the flagship killer, a smartphone which has garnered rave reviews last year.
The Wall Street Journal reports that Microsoft is investing $70 million in Cyanogen which is best known for its customized version of Android. Cyanogen has reportedly raised $100 million to date. This should be noted that Cyanogen recently refused an offer from Google and hopes to live its dream of being an open version of Android alive.
WSJ writes:
“Microsoft would be a minority investor in a roughly $70 million round of equity financing that values Cyanogen in the high hundreds of millions.”
What could be Microsoft’s intentions?
Image: WSJ
This is important and unusual because Microsoft is owner of its very own Windows Phone operating system and is gearing up for the upcoming launch of Windows 10 for mobile devices. This move of Microsoft can be attributed to its commitment to embrace open source and maybe some mischief.
Cyanogen claims to have a team of 9,000 volunteer software developers. Cyanogen’s Chief Executive Kirt McMaster told WSJ last week:

“We’re going to take Android away from Google.”

Image: Gizmag

Apart from different versions of Android for the smartphone makers, Google also releases the Android core under an open-source license. This version is free for everybody and anyone can use and modify or fork this core without linking the Google services. The best examples are Amazon’s products which run on forked Android. These independent versions are already very popular in China where Google has struggled to leave its mark.
These types of Android versions, which are not under Google’s control, are a problem for Google because not every forked version promotes and uses Google’s services and hence, Google makes no money. Due to this Microsoft’s investment in Cyanogen, it will be harder for Google to bring all version of Android under its control.
Microsoft and Cyanogen, both have declined to comment. By investing in Cyanogen, Microsoft can get more users and claim a bigger share of the mobile market. Under the new CEO Satya Nadella, Microsoft has shown such commitments to open source in the past.

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

The New FACEBOOK LITE,Reduces App Overload

Facebook Releases Facebook Lite, Drastically Reduces App Overhead
Android: One of the biggest complaints about the Facebook app is that it can take up too many resources, particularly on older phones. Which is probably why Facebook released Facebook Lite, a super lightweight version of its app directed at developing markets.


Currently, the app is only available officially in a few countries—Bangladesh, Nepal, Nigeria, South Africa, Sudan, Sri Lanka, Vietnam and Zimbabwe—but there are so many ways to download the APK for yourself, it's unlikely to stay within those countries for long. The app itself is incredibly spartan, with very little excess. The APK is about 252KB, as opposed to the 27MB that the main app can usually take up, so if you're on an older device, a slower network, or just don't want all the extra junk, Facebook Lite is probably exactly what you were looking for. (But if you don't like it, the mobile site is always a good alternative.)

Monday, January 26, 2015

Telegram vs Whatsapp choice is yours




An another little less famous,untold,unseen but still impressive and one of the best chat app(FREE) available for download is TELEGRAM.Yes some of it's feature is really better than Whatsapp like end to end security or encrypted messaging,fastest message delivery than any chat app and so...




It support every recent and famous platform,OS like Android,IOS,Windows etc.

Telegram has his server located on various part of the world which enable the user to use it even in remote location.It provide cloud based storage system due to that user doesn't face any size limit for file sharing and can share unlimited files of any size and  type 'support even document 'which Whatsapp doesn't.
Now the best part is it's absolutely FREE without any add.
“TELEGRAM IS NOT INTENDED TO BRING REVENUE, IT WILL NEVER SELL ADS.”
These were the Messages for the audience of one of the most popular app TELEGRAM! You can download telegram from the PLAY STORE!  While browsing through my website my school’s Principle Madam who is a highly qualified teacher , told me to describe my audience about the features of the amazingly growing application Telegram!


Now let’s compare TELEGRAM with the Giant Messenger WhatsApp!

Features best described for TELEGRAM
telegram
Reason to switch from worldwide famous chat app WHATSAPP to TELEGRAM :-
telegram1
SOURCE: Alexeinunez.com

SOURCE: Alexeinunez.com

SOURCE: Alexeinunez.com

SOURCE: Alexeinunez.com


Telegram Applications

Source code

For the moment we are focusing on open sourcing the things that allow developers to quickly build something using our API. We have published the code for our Android, iOS, web and desktop apps (Win, OSX and Linux). We will be releasing more code eventually.
Telegram for Android
Official Android App, see Google Play Market page for full description.
Licensed under GNU GPL v. 2 or later.
GitHub »
Messenger for Telegram OSX
Native OSX client.
Licensed under GNU GPL v. 2.
GitHub »
Telegram for Web browsers
Javascript client for browsers. Mac, Windows, Linux.
Licensed under GNU GPL v. 3.
GitHub »
Telegram Desktop
Qt-based desktop client. Mac, Windows, Linux.
Licensed under GNU GPL v. 3.
GitHub »
Telegram CLI (Unofficial)
Linux Command-line interface for Telegram.
Licensed under GNU GPL v. 2.
GitHub »
Telegram for iPhone
Telegram for WP

Thursday, November 07, 2013

New features and facts of Google's android 4.4 Kit-Kat



Advanced Photo Editor detailed

Android 4.4 features an advanced photo-editing suite that Google has optimised for use on both smartphones and tablets. Google software engineer Nicolas Roard took to YouTube to detail the application aboard a Nexus 7 slate.

With KitKat’s Photo Editor you can apply predefined looks, alter the geometry, saturation and applied filters. But perhaps best of all – Photo Editor is non-destructive. Which means no matter what you do to an image you can always revert back to the original one.

“The editor is pretty powerful, works on tablet and phones, handles full-size image processing, zooming, re-edit, image exports, user presets, etc. This new version also adds more powerful specialized tools (graduated filters, per-channel saturation controls, local adjustments, etc.),” wrote Roard in a Google+ post. 

You can also export an image from Photo Editor in different sizes and file formats. Photo Editor is now shipping inside ASOP, according to Google

What else is new inside Android 4.4 KitKat?

Android 4.4 is officially here alongside and inside the Google Nexus 5. Ahead of launch there was plenty of speculation about both the handset and Google’s confectionary-baiting software update. So what’s new inside the latest build of Android 4.4? Quite a bit as it goes… Google has reworked the UX, added in better support for low-end hardware, and tweaked many of Android’s core elements. 

Here are some of Android 4.4's best bits...

Goodbye, cyan-blue Holo theme!

We've drilled this one into your heads for sure, but it's worth pointing out yet again that the current Jelly Bean-esque Holo theme is gone. Android 4.4 KitKat takes onto a dark/white gray contrasting one, and we actually ended up liking it, despite it feeling a bit lifeless. Considering the industry we're in, we've pretty much come to accept change as a fact of life, but it's always nice when things work out in the end.

While still on the topic of the theme, it's worth pointing out that Google has done a splendid job of integrating the new color scheme – it flows through the near entirety of Android 4.4 KitKat. One exception is perhaps the dialer, which still looks nearly unchanged, except in terms of its design, of course..

Better Visuals


Applications and games can now use the entirety of the display with 4.4, meaning no more notifications bar and no more battery icon. Just full screen applications and games. Android’s UI now stays hidden whenever you’re interacting with content.



To make sure that users always have easy, consistent access to system UI from full-screen immersive mode, Android 4.4 supports a new gesture — in immersive mode, an edge swipe from the top or bottom of the screen now reveals the system UI,” said Google.

Sensors

Like Apple’s M7 coprocessor, Android KitKat now wants to know more about what you do and where you are. To enable this Google has enabled hardware sensor batching inside 4.4, a feature that makes sensors far less power hungry. 

“Android works with the device hardware to collect and deliver sensor events efficiently in batches, rather than individually as they are detected. This lets the device's application processor remain in a low-power idle state until batches are delivered. You can request batched events from any sensor using a standard event listener, and you can control the interval at which you receive batches.” 

Performance
This is the big one –– Android 4.4 will run on handsets with just 512MB of RAM. That’s right, people: KitKat will theoretically run on the HTC Hero, a handset that came out almost three years ago! 

KitKat streamlines every major component to reduce memory use and introduces new APIs and tools to help developers create more memory-efficient applications.

“OEMs building the next generation of Android devices can take advantage of targeted recommendations and options to run Android 4.4 efficiently, even on low-memory devices. Dalvik JIT code cache tuning, kernel samepage merging (KSM), swap to zRAM, and other optimizations help manage memory.”

Cloud printing

It’s not a deal breaker by any means but you can now print using Google Cloud Print via your Android 4.4-powered handset and/or tablet. Google has opened up the APIs to developers, so expect support inside most of the big name apps inside Google Play very soon. 

“Android 4.4 introduces native platform support for printing, along with APIs for managing printing and adding new types of printer support. The platform provides a print manager that mediates between apps requesting printing and installed print services that handle print requests.”

“The print manager provides shared services and a system UI for printing, giving users consistent control over printing from any app. The print manager also ensures the security of content as it's passed across processes, from an app to a print service.”

Faster Multitasking

Android 4.4 features a raft of back-end tweaks aimed at improving the overall performance and speed with which you handset computes tasks. Google has further optimised memory inside Android 4.4 –– it can now run on just 512MB of RAM –– and touchscreen response is better, too. 

The end result is a smoother UX, faster loading applications and a significant bump in multitasking performance. Android was pretty decent at running multiple apps before –– say, Spotify and Chrome and email. With KitKat it'll be even better. 

Smart Caller ID



Inside Android you can sync you contacts list with a myriad of social networks and account types, including: Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google, Google Mail, Google+. This sync pulls your contacts' details across and links their profile picture to their name in your contacts app, thus giving you a tidy, useful, contacts list complete with profile pictures.

KitKat takes things further. When you receive a call from an unknown number –– like a business or a pizza delivery guy, for instance –– KitKat will scan Google Maps for an appropriate image and, if it can find one, use it for the caller ID. The idea is to give you a better idea of who is calling you.

The “OK Google” command

The Moto X could do it and now so can Android KitKat. Navigate to Settings, turn the feature on and say “Okay Google” and watch Google Now magically appear before your eyes on your handset's display –– no touching required. 

You can ask it about the weather, for directions, theatre times, and sports scores. Or, you can get it to play a certain song, text a friend, or make a phone call.

Hangouts is the new SMS


In a bid to bolster its position against the likes of WhatsApp, Viber, and BBM –– now available on Android and iOS –– Google has repurposed its Hangouts application to feature SMS and MMS messages, as well as IM threads from your Google contacts.

You can even share your location with the new Hangouts and send animated GIFs.  

Screen recording

Screen-grabs are one thing but having the ability to capture real-time video of what’s happening on your droid’s display is another thing entirely. With Android KitKat this is now a reality, and all saved content is stored on your device as an MP4 file.  

“By default, the utility selects a resolution equal or close to the device's display resolution in the current orientation. When you are done recording, you can share the video directly from your device or pull the MP4 file to your host computer for post-production.”

Android 4.4 KitKat update coming to Nexus 4, Nexus 7, and Nexus 10 "very soon"