Google Nexus 7 hands-on

This week at Google I/0 2012 we’ve gotten the opportunity to take a bit of time to get some hands-on time with the brand new ASUS Nexus 7 tablet by Google. This device has been given out as a part of the free Developer Pack delivered to all attendees at the I/O 2012 conference, and it’s quite the powerhouse. This device is made to be handheld, has a soft back so you’ve got fully comfortable experience, and the whole shebang is made to show off not only the newest bits of Google Play, but Android 4.1 Jelly Bean as well.

This device you’ll see working on its own with Jelly Bean as well as with the brand new Nexus Q as well, that being a bit of streaming action for your HDTV and home audio system. This device works with an NVIDIA Tegra 3 quad-core processor with a 12 GPU cores for ultimate gaming action, and has access to the TegraZone for games. The Nexus 7 is a vanilla device, this meaning that you’ve got the most naked version of Android 4.1 Jelly Bean that you’re going to see on the market.

The tablet experience here takes you to a new level of home entertainment – or that’s what it’s mean to do from what we’ve heard and seen thus far. Have a peek at this Nexus Q demonstration working with the Nexus 7 from this week as well:

The display you’ve got on this device is a massively dense 7” 1280×800 HD display (216 ppi), it’s back-lit IPS that seems here to be more than generous enough for daily use, and up top you’ve got a modest 1.2megapixel camera. This device weighs in at a light 340g, and feels fabulous to hold. We’ll be reviewing this device in full soon – stay tuned to both our Google I/O 2012 portal and our Android portal, not to mention our brand new Nexus 7 portal just opened this week for more!

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Google Nexus 7 hands-on is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Google IO 2012: Project Glass wrap-up

Make no mistake, Project Glass dominated the Google IO 2012 keynote, with a blockbuster entrance worthy of a James Bond film, and the shock news that the wearable is actually up for preorder. Google’s Sergey Brin interrupted the presentation with news that Glass-wearing skydivers were floating in a blimp above the Moscone Center, and would be jumping down while live-streaming through a Google+ Hangout. Check out the must-see video after the cut!

The skydivers were met by stunt bike riders, who passed a Project Glass unit to abseilers, who handed it to more bikers that delivered it to Brin on-stage. He then called up some friends from the Glass development team to flesh out Google’s vision for the headset, in what was increasingly sounding like a sales pitch.

That suspicion proved well-founded in fact, when Brin revealed that Google would be taking preorders for the Project Glass Explorer Edition at IO this week. Available for $1,500 and expected to ship in early 2013, the headset doesn’t come cheap but already developers are flocking to sign up.

Of course, no Google keynote would be complete without a little anti-Apple snark, and it was left to Project Glass to highlight quite how much better looking at data in a natural way out of the corner of your eye is, compared to stabbing frantically at a tiny phone screen.


Google IO 2012: Project Glass wrap-up is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Google IO 2012: Nexus 7 and Nexus Q hardware wrap-up

Google’s IO Keynote wasn’t all about Jelly Bean: the company also had some slick new hardware to demonstrate in the shape of the Nexus 7 tablet and Nexus Q media computer. The ASUS-made Nexus 7 came as little surprise, a 7-inch 1280 x 800 tablet running Jelly Bean on a Tegra 3 processor. As for the Nexus Q, that takes a little more explaining.

The orb-like gadget is part headless-phone – running Android, of course – and part Apple TV alternative, hooking up with HDMI to your TV and throwing in speaker connections too. It can be used as a media streamer, pulling in content from YouTube and other cloud stores such as Google’s new movie purchase system, as well as a communal jukebox of sorts, with a shared playlist accessible from Android devices. It’s priced at a hefty $299 and will ship in 2-3 weeks time in the US.

One such Android device that could control the Nexus Q is the Google Nexus 7. The tablet ticks all the spec-sheet boxes – it has a 1.2-megapixel front camera, WiFi b/g/n, Bluetooth, 8GB/16GB of internal storage and 1GB of RAM, all in a 198.5 x 120 x 10.45mm form factor weighing 340g – but comes in at $199 for the entry-level model.

The 4325 mAh battery is good for up to 8hrs of use, Google claims, and there’s a microphone, NFC, accelerometer, magnetometer, GPS and a gyroscope. Interestingly, it runs Chrome for Android as the default browser, and comes with a specially updated version of Currents.

Standby for hands-on content with both new Nexus devices!


Google IO 2012: Nexus 7 and Nexus Q hardware wrap-up is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Google IO 2012: Android Jelly Bean wrap-up

Google didn’t stint on Android news at the IO keynote this morning, and Jelly Bean is shaping up to be a significant improvement to the platform despite the .1 version change. The most important detail is probably the release date, with select devices getting Jelly Bean 4.1 in July and the SDK arriving today for developers, but that’s nowhere near the only interesting tidbit. Read on for the full wrap-up.

We’d been expecting Jelly Bean, so it came as no surprise when Google officially unveiled it. It brings an updated homescreen system, with dynamically adjusting apps and widgets, along with support for offline voice typing. Performance overall should be smoother, too, as the slickly-named Project Butter attempts to speed up the interface and reduce lag.

Jelly Bean also refreshes the notifications system, with more insight into exactly what apps are telling you from the pull-down notification drawer, and there’re also new NFC abilities onboard too. Google Voice Search takes on Apple’s Siri, with natural speech query support that looks significantly faster than what Apple’s system can deliver.

Google now introduces a huge dollop of context into the Android experience, allowing Jelly Bean to make inferences based on location, calendar appointment and other data to better deliver information to the user.

In “behind the scenes” news, meanwhile, Google has challenged Android fragmentation with the promise to get access to new software versions to manufacturers 2-3 months before release, while developers get app encryption to play with.


Google IO 2012: Android Jelly Bean wrap-up is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Google Nexus 7 tablet official

This week at Google I/O 2012 the teams of Google and ASUS have revealed the Nexus 7 ASUS tablet – the first official Nexus series Android tablet – with Jelly Bean. This device has 1200 x 800 HD pixels across its face, a Tegra 3 quad-core processor with 12-core GPU from NVIDIA, a front-facing camera (whose specs were not revealed), and a 9 hour battery (video playback). This tablet is 340g light, “fits perfectly in one hand”, and “just feels right.”

This device has been revealed to show off the Jelly Bean experience, but also to push the Google Play app store to the forefront as well. This device has a new widget called “My Library” – it connected to your cloud in the Google Play shop.

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The new Google Play magazines app is included in this release, with a full selection of one of the newest items on the Google Play store. This device is obviously also made to show off the new Google Play TV show episodes and Movie purchasing revealed this week as well.

Have a peek at our I/O 2012 portal as well as our Android portal this whole week to keep up to date on all things I/O!


Google Nexus 7 tablet official is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Google Now boosts events and planning for Android

This week Android 4.1 Jelly Bean recieved an update inside itself, that being Google Now – this update works with Google Maps, Navigation, and more, to bring you updated information about everything around you. This update works with Appointments to bring you to the bus that’s closest, tells you how long it’ll be to walk, how long the bus will take, and everything in-between. Flights are included – status, terminal, and delays.

Google Now works with Sports in that it’s got updated sports scores, your favorite teams included from your already loved bits from Google+. This update works with Travel – with cash exchange rates, translations, and current events. Google Now works with traffic, will get you where you want when you want, and can understand your requirements no matter what you’re going to use to get there.

If you’re headed to a Minnesota Twins game, you’ll get game scores, ticket information, shows food information around the area (if you’re downtown Minneapolis, that’s a lot), and connects to Google Maps to bring you there.

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Have a peek at our Jelly Bean timeline below and stay tuned all week to each of our portals!
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Google Now boosts events and planning for Android is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Android 4.1 Jelly Bean revealed at I/O 2012

This week Hugo Barra stepped on stage for Google and started to bring on the fire to exactly what Google pushed last year: momentum, mobile, and more – and Jelly Bean. This update was touted as the next generation of Android in that it’ll take what they’d revealed thus far, bumping it up just a bit more for the integrated Android experience.

Also beginning again with momentum speaking on how the Android activations this year had broken the 400 million activations mark – this explosive compared to last year’s 100 million. Up from last year’s 400k daily activations, the activations of Android device this year has hit 1 million devices – daily.

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A heatmap of the world showed the device activations for Android not in the USA, but the rest of the world bigger instead. Stay tuned for the rest of the keynote and the event all week long through our big I/O 2012 portal!


Android 4.1 Jelly Bean revealed at I/O 2012 is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Google I/O 2012: We’re here!

It’s time again for Google’s own developer conference, and SlashGear is here to bring you the whole set of events as they happen. We’ll be bringing you everything from Android to Chrome as an operating system to Chrome as a browser and back again, and right from the show floor as we do it. The big events begin tomorrow morning, bright and early, and they last all week long!

There are several ways to follow SlashGear as we traverse the landscape that is Google I/O, starting with our Android portal – which you’ll see below this paragraph in link form – and moving on to our in-post timeline system (in each post you’ll see covered this week.) You can find more information on Chrome through our Chrome tag, and of course our Google portal will bring you the whole series of events as well. The same is true of our IO 2012 portal which went live this past week!

Head to any of several important articles linked in the timeline below to get caught up as we head into the main event starting tomorrow morning. We’re sure to see so much Google software and hardware that it’ll make your gadget-loving mind burst!


Google I/O 2012: We’re here! is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


The Amazing Spider-Man movie: our first look

This month we had a chance to take a look at an early screening of the upcoming blockbuster action film The Amazing Spider-Man, and what little we can tell you at the moment includes this: the visual effects here take the cake. While the refresh of the Spider-Man movie series has a story that is thrilling in its relative newness, it’s the mise en scene that will strike you hardest. If The Avengers proved to us that its prime time to bring the Marvel Universe to the big screen in a massive way, Spider-Man is the knife that cuts all the sweetest bits of this delicious visual cake and serves them up with the friendly neighborhood kid this superhero was always supposed to be.

There’s not a whole lot we can say about the individual characters without giving away the plot of the movie. That said, there’s no holding back the fact that Spider-Man takes the great high-flying feeling you get in the first three movies and keeps ahold of it fully. Though instead of seeing Peter Parker doing all manner of rubber-bodied wobble-flips like we saw in Spider-Man 1, 2, and 3, we’ve suddenly got a whole new generation of web-slinger in which he looks one heck of a lot more real, and feels that way too.

You’ll find Peter learning his skills fin a complete reboot of the Spider-Man storyline, with his physical transformation being shown clearly in his bent-body calamitous crashes and bloody bashes galore. This movie has Andrew Garfield getting cut and bruised more than the other three Spider-Man movies combined, and the audience is certainly going to have a great time while he does it. The most important thing this movie does is make you believe that Spider-Man is born of the same kid hero that went big in the 1960s when an adult hero was the only kind there was.

As far as the presentation goes, this is certainly a film you’re going to want to see in IMAX 3D. The screening we had a peek at today was presented on one of these massive screens with stadium seating, (the only kind any theater should have these days, of course), and RealD 3D. While I’ll never get over how odd it is to wear 3D glasses of any kind, or that these glasses make the whole movie just a bit less bright, the third dimension here is top-notch.

Have a look back at our talk with 3ality Technica about their involvement with Prometheus to see what kind of gear the crew was using to make The Amazing Spider-Man’s 3D camera setup a reality. This film was made with a couple of RED cameras on every shot where there’s 3D, with 3ality Technica’s gear allowing the filming of this movie to be no more difficult than a 2D movie would have been – and it shows. There’s no holding back here when it comes to effects shots and all manner of building-crawling angles here. Expect a ride, and you shall receive it.

We’ll be having a more involved look and review of The Amazing Spider-Man once the film is actually out in theaters early next month. Meanwhile, stay tuned for several more features – including interviews of all the stars and some of the crew, too – we’ll be producing right here in the main news feed in our fabulous [Entertainment portal] – web-slinging action coming at you for weeks!


The Amazing Spider-Man movie: our first look is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Apple, Microsoft, now Google: I/O 2012 closes the mobility triptych

First Apple, then Microsoft, and now it’s Google‘s turn: three weeks of back-to-back mobile strategy with each of the big three companies laying out their stalls for smartphones and tablets. It’s arguably never been such an interesting time in mobility, but nor has there ever been so much at stake. Ecosystems, openness and long-term support have all divided opinion, as we’ve seen what the devices of tomorrow (but not necessarily today) will be running, and while Google is coming last to the table it also has the opportunity to outshine everything its rivals have demonstrated. That’s far from being a given, however.

Apple kicked things off in early June with its WWDC 2012 keynote, making no mention of new mobile hardware – the new iPad is still only halfway through its expected lifecycle, and the iPhone is, if the rumors are to be believed, still a few months away – but detailing iOS 6 which, for many, will be much like a new device when it hits their phones and tablets this fall. The company is known for its incredibly polished software experience, and with iOS 6 rolling out to iPhone 3GS, iPhone 4, iPhone 4S, iPad 2 and new iPad owners (with a few omissions depending on the age of your hardware) it’s a comprehensive blanket upgrade that focuses attention on what both Microsoft and Google do for existing owners.

That point was hammered home the following week, when Microsoft grabbed the spotlight for two events: the debut of Surface, its Windows 8/RT tablet, and Windows Phone 8. The twin launches echo the duality of strategy in Microsoft’s approach to mobile. Phones get Windows Phone, tablets get Windows; in contrast, Apple pushes iOS 6 for both iPhone and iPad. The shared core is a step toward tying up the disparate strands of Microsoft’s phone and tablet lines, though it comes at a cost: Microsoft throwing Windows Phone 7/7.5 early-adopters under the bus with the admission that they won’t ever get a Windows Phone 8 upgrade.

“Are platform updates a privilege or a right?”

The reasons behind that are complex, and tempered somewhat with the existence of Windows Phone 7.8 that will bring many of the UI enhancements to the existing smartphones. Nonetheless, Microsoft’s decision to again break with the past as it claws away at the smartphone OS market has prompted no small amount of discussion around whether platform updates are a privilege or a right.

Such a discussion has already weighed heavy around the neck of Google and its Android partners, with flagship devices like the AT&T Galaxy S II only now getting updates to the latest version of the OS (with Google apparently mere days away from announcing its successor, no less). Like Apple, Google has taken the one-OS-for-mobile approach, but it has only been halfway successful; Android phones are flying off shelves, but Android tablets have failed to locate their tipping point.

So, what can we expect from Google at I/O this week? And, perhaps more importantly, what does the company need to do to end the June mobility triptych on a high rather than a dud note?

Jelly Bean, the next version of Android is a given. That should bring a spring to the step of Galaxy Nexus owners, tipped to be first in line for the new update (and who have felt somewhat overshadowed in recent months with the high-profile launches of HTC’s One X and Samsung’s Galaxy S III). Ice Cream Sandwich marked a significant evolution of Android in terms of usability and aesthetics, though few users have actually seen both given the paucity of phones that have seen a 4.0 upgrade and the smaller-again subsection of those that haven’t been reskinned by the OEM involved.

“Hardware is not the problem: a shortage of compelling apps is”

Jelly Bean will no doubt tick some of the boxes Apple’s recent iOS releases have opened up, such as a virtual personal assistant system (believed to be codenamed “Majel”) to take on Siri, but it’s what it can do for bigger screens that’s key. Google needs a comprehensive tablet strategy and it needs one fast; two generations of Android (3.0 and 4.0) have failed to make a dint in the iPad’s marketshare. Hardware is arguably not the problem – though as Microsoft demonstrated with Surface last week, a little high-quality magnesium goes a long way – but a significant shortage of compelling applications is.

Google I/O is, of course, the ideal time to address that. Having copious developers on hand is a given, but Google is also expected to unveil a Nexus-branded tablet – a 7-incher made by ASUS, if the rumor machine is to be believed – that should promote the pure Android experience at a price tag ($199; again, according to leaks) that will encourage those developers to finally pick up a test mule to work on.

Windows 8 threatens to split developer attention even further, however, and Google can’t count solely on Android’s broad footprint in phones to carry it. Both Apple and Microsoft have multi-platform strategies with their own credible strengths, and that’s an area where Google is playing catch up. Time hasn’t run out for Android tablets, but the window of opportunity is narrowing fast.

SlashGear will be bringing you all the news from Google I/O 2012 this week.


Apple, Microsoft, now Google: I/O 2012 closes the mobility triptych is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.