2. This is a slide title
1)VR platform(Daydream)
2)Alloo and duo
3)Google Home
4)ANDROID N
5)ANDROID WEAR 2.0
6)RUNNING ANDROID APPS WITHOUT DOWNLOADING
THEM
7)Android Studio 2.2
3. GOOGLEâS VR PLATFORM OF THE FUTURE
Google now has a mobile virtual reality platform. It's called Daydream, and it's built on top
of Android N. That means it's not going to compete with the likes of the PC-powered HTC
Vive or Oculus Rift (at least not yet, anyway), but looks much more powerful than
Cardboard and represents a huge step in the push to advance VR out of its early stages.
From the sound of it, Daydream is a lot like Android for VR. It's a backbone of software
inside Android N (simply known as "VR Mode") that provides users with an entire
ecosystem to play around in. There will be a home screen with apps (which looks a lot like
the Gear VR's home screen, to be honest), and Google has apparently already created
special VR versions of its own apps like YouTube, Street View, the Google Play Store, Play
Movies, and Google Photos. Other companies, like The New York Times, HBO, Netflix,
Ubisoft, and Electronic Arts are already developing for Daydream as well.
that it will only work on new phones that have special sensors and screens
5. Google has two new messaging apps
Google is making a new AI-powered foray into messaging with Allo. Itâs a mobile-only app
that you sign up for with your phone number and have the option of connecting to your
Google account. It has the usual messaging features, including emoji, some custom stickers,
and the ability to draw on photos. It also has the ability to control the font size of your
messages.
When you open the app youâre presented with a selfie-cam video preview of yourself â
which is important, because when you pick who you want to call, a feature called "Knock
Knock" allows the person youâre calling to see a video preview of you before they even
answer.
Duo is mobile-only, though, and itâs tied to your phone number, so FaceTime has a big
advantage here. But Duo â like Allo â will be available on both Android and iOS this
summer.
7. DUO IS GOOGLEâS FACETIME COMPETITOR
Because one messaging app is never enough, Google followed up its announcement of Allo
with another app called Duo. Itâs a video chatting app that, much like how Apple splits up
iMessage and FaceTime, exists separately and is completely dedicated to a video-only
experience.
The good thing about that is Duo will be dead simple to use. When you open the app youâre
presented with a selfie-cam video preview of yourself â which is important, because when
you pick who you want to call, a feature called "Knock Knock" allows the person youâre calling
to see a video preview of you before they even answer.
Duo is mobile-only, though, and itâs tied to your phone number, so FaceTime has a big
advantage here. But Duo â like Allo â will be available on both Android and iOS this
summer.
8. A SMART SPEAKER FOR THE SMART HOME
The company also announced a new home assistant called Google Home, a small speaker
with always-listening microphones that integrates into a broad range of services. The obvious
comparison is Amazonâs Echo, and Home will answer questions and execute commands in a
similar way, relying on Googleâs Assistant technology to make sense of the queries.
The device itself is a small cylinder with a rounded top and a speaker at the base, available
in a number of different shells to match your decor. Unlike Echo, itâs designed to be used with
multiple devices in multiple rooms, so you can ask a single query and not have to worry about
three different devices answering back.
Home is built on the Chromecast standard, which lets it push media to other Cast-compatible
speakers and screens, change temperature or lighting through Nest devices, and integrate
with services like Spotify. Google hasnât opened Homeâs API to developers yet, so Home canât
communicate with as many outside services as Echo, but Google says those integrations will
become possible as the platform develops.
10. ANDROID N IS SMARTER, FASTER, BETTER
We got our first look at Android N with a developer preview in March, which showed off split-
screen multitasking, quick settings buttons, and a new set of emoji. The OS wonât be out of
beta until later this summer, but today, Google released a new beta and showed off even
more of the new operating system.
New features include more control over notification size from different apps and a new
picture-in-picture mode. N could also be a better platform for gaming thanks to a battery of
optimizations and a new API called Vulkan that lets developers directly control a phoneâs GPU
for sharper 3D graphics."
12. ANDROID WEAR 2.0
Google also announced the biggest overhaul to Android Wear since it was released back in
2014. That said, Android Wear 2.0 isnât shockingly different from the first version, but there are
a few changes that will definitely change the experience. For one, users can now make data
from any app show up on any watch face â similar to how complications work on the Apple
Watch.
Most importantly, Android Wear 2.0 is supposed to help your smartwatch become more
autonomous. Google says that watches equipped with the new version will need to rely less
on smartphones and cellular connections, freeing up users to be more active without lugging
their phones around. Features like automatic exercise recognition and better third-party app
syncing should help this, too. And, of course, Google showed off a tiny, swipeable QWERTY
keyboard, because who doesnât want to type on their wrist?
14. RUNNING ANDROID APPS WITHOUT
DOWNLOADING THEM
A lot of companies are trying to improve the browsing experience in mobile, chiefly by
circumventing the open web. Thereâs Facebookâs Instant Articles and Googleâs own AMP, but
today Google announced a novel approach â loading parts of apps even if you havenât
installed them. Itâs called Android Instant Apps.
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